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14,116 questions • 30,587 answers • 893,923 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,116 questions • 30,587 answers • 893,923 learners
It thought that that espérer was followed by the future tense when stated affirmatively, and was followed by the subjunctive tense when espérer when stated as a question or in the negative. Yet, in the writing practice, the following is presented as the correct way to use espérer:
Espérons que cela se rafraichisse dans les jours qui viennent.
Why when that is an affirmative statement? Why isn't this correct?: "Espérons que cela se rafraichira"
How would you convey the English expression, "Shame on you!"? Or, "Shame on him for eating the last cookie."?
In a recent test, the answer required was "mes parent aimeraient ce qu'on se marie" and the response "'voudraient'' was not accepted. Aren't either regularly used to mean "'would like?" I think technically the former is would like and the latter is would want, but that seems pretty subtle. For example, in ordering food "'Je voudrais avoir . . . .''
Hello,
Can you please explain why animal familier and not animal de compagnie ?
Thank you
I have some questions with the clarification for the use of PENDANT.
As I have read in other grammar lessons, PENDANT is used to express the 'full duration' of a completed action IN THE PAST ... or the 'set duration' of an action to be done in the future. Pendant cannot be used for the present!
If this is the case then
a) would it help in clarification if some wording to that effect be added to the lesson for PENDANT, else based on the lesson someone could ask me "why cant I go into the kindergarten room? and I could answer " Les enfants dorment pendant une heure" ... which would be wrong...
b)the example sentence "Il court pendant une heure tous les matins/He runs for one hour every morning appears to be unnecessarily skirting that rule .. or at least adding a bit of doubt??.
Of course if there is no such restrictions please let me know.
Thank you!
'different' as an adjective ... before or after the noun and why?
merci
hi can you explain how to use tel and tellement please
I don't understand "le tout".
Is "le" article or pronoun?
Does "tout" mean "everything"? Is it an adjective or pronoun or noun?
When I have done well on a quiz, there is often a comment regarding what I have "won". "Someone won something!" or, " Look at all you've won!" I was just wondering what am I winning or what have I won, and where is it being kept?
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