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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,459 questions • 31,310 answers • 933,916 learners
Remember that possessive pronouns agree in gender and number with the *owned* item (son billet / sa carte / ses parents).»
In the lesson, son,sa,ses have been referred to as possessive adjectives in one line, and possessive pronouns in the line immediately following. In general throughout the course they have been referred to as 'possessive adjectives' (as in French they are always followed by the noun modified, this would seem to be correct).
Hello!
I saw that the correct answer was "la liste au Père Noël de ma fille"; does "lire la liste de ma fille au Père Noël" sounds/is wrong to french ears? Is there some rule or lesson about this?
Thanks in advance,
Luiz
There are many beach resorts along America's coastlines, including the very tropical Key West, Florida. While the Bahamas are very close to the mainland of United States, the most interesting American beaches may be in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, namely Hawaii, but many would dispute that in favor a beloved local beaches.
Bonnes vacances
Toujours is being red-lined at the end of this lesson. However as the action "hesitation' or 'being unsure' is ongoing, these 3 links from Laura Lawless suggest to me that toujours is the better word for 'still' in this context. At the very least, they indicate that toujours is a correct option.
thttps://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/encore-vs-toujours/
https://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/encore/
https://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/toujours/
Il se lave does that become se lave-t-il? And while we're at it, il adore becomes adore-t-il, but il t'adore becomes t'il -t-adore??
in the sentence "J'adorais parler de livres" why de and not des? there is no adjective.
What does this phrase mean? Is he talking about the possible drop in prices or is there something else?
Why is it not 'qui ne la mangeraient pas'...?
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