Combattre vs Bataille

Thanh Tân T.B2Kwiziq community member

Combattre vs Bataille

Adding the passé simple to the picture is such a pain in the neck, really!!! Can I use un combattre in stead of une bataille to the final sentence of the story.

Asked 1 year ago
Maarten K.C1 Kwiziq Q&A super contributor Correct answer

You would be understood, but ‘bataille de boules de neige’ is the standard expression, and changing it would sound odd. Just as you could say a ‘snow battle’ or a ‘snow war’ in English, but would be unlikely to (at least as far as I have ever heard used, being from a non-snow part of the country). 

Did you mean passé composé makes it difficult ? According to the description it is not intended to be an exercise on passé simple - if passé simple is thrown in, I would agree with you that for most, it is worth recognising but not worth learning. 

As for passé composé- it is the most commonly used past tense in everyday French, so pretty much essential to come to grips with. Over time, you will have a core set of verbs you use regularly in communication, and then learning the more infrequently used ones will also get easier. 

You will never know every verb and neither will anyone else ! (As always in French, there may be an occasional and unpredictable exception).

Thanh Tân T. asked:

Combattre vs Bataille

Adding the passé simple to the picture is such a pain in the neck, really!!! Can I use un combattre in stead of une bataille to the final sentence of the story.

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