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14,948 questions • 32,442 answers • 1,016,250 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,948 questions • 32,442 answers • 1,016,250 learners
This question referring to visitors either visiteurs or visiteuses has a reference to adjectives ending in "er" becoming "ere" in the feminine. Could you please explain how this is relevant? I'm really missing something here.
Regards,
Neil
Instead of “Après s'être levé, William alla prendre sa douche” would it be correct to use the passé composé instead of the passé simple?
“Après s'être levé, William est allé prendre sa douche”.
Merci
Just FYI a few of the lines of text do not show the translation when you hover over them.
where should I put the adverbs When the sentence have an direct object
are these sentences true and is there any other way to form a Sentence
Le garçon a nettoyé la pièce plus lentement que moi
le garçon nettoie la pièce plus lentement que moi
please help. Thanks
Can you explain when to choose toi in place of tu?
bien or bon?
I could understand, «c'est bon» «c'est bien» and «être bien + adv.» such as le contraire est bien documenté
But «être bien (alone)»?
Nous t'en ferons une
Nous te la ferons.
Which one is right?
Can anyone please clarify? Thanks in advance.
on aura chacun son propre chambre.
on aura chacun notre propre chambre.
I can't seem to find a straight answer about the use of the hyphen in this situation. I know that object pronouns are attached to the positive imperative verb with a hyphen, so you would write, "Lisez-le!" I am also informed that "ça" is a pronoun. But somehow, I find "Lisez ça", not "Lisez-ça!" and I wonder if anybody has any thoughts about why.
Hello! Why is bain plural here with an s? I would expect there would only be one bathroom to each hotel room.
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