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14,414 questions • 31,206 answers • 928,558 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,414 questions • 31,206 answers • 928,558 learners
First up, this a lovely poem. Second, is there a context where I should use "magique" and a different condition under which I should use "sorciere"?
You know how the slider for the audio doesn't go back?
It gets really inconvenient.
If I want to relisten to the previous few seconds of a sentence, I need to wait for the ENTIRE audio to to finish, then listen to it again until that specific part, so if anyone could fix that it would be a lot better... otherwise, it's kind of time-taking, but otherwise, Kwiziq really helps my French grades- it's hard for me to keep up with my attention problems- I go off topic, I can't sit still. Kwiziq is best :) *Some credit to DEEPTHI, she has also stated this
Hi, uh, how do I know where to use the special form- "puis" and such? Also, how many 'special cases' can there be?
"Il te faut de l'aide."
I'm struggling to understand why this is "you need help" rather than "you must help".
I understand that Il faut can express a need but also a must - but I'm quite confused on how I can tell!
why say elle va au marché? instead of elle marche
Hi, I had written a question on the linked lesson but I think perhaps this is a better space. I believe I had written "à un hôpital" and this was marked incorrect in favour of "dans un hôpital."
Is this because the focus of the sentence is the work experience which takes place inside the hospital? Or what is the reason why dans can be used but not à?
Merci!
Yea, hi, what if some of the group nouns are male, but some are female?
In the connaître/savoir lesson in Lawless French , it says ignorer is a faux-ami. it actually means 'not to know' and not 'to ignore'. Do you agree with this? I have seen it in other places like Reverso where it is used as -to ignore.
I'm wondering why mieux is used instead of meilleur when referring to organic ingredients in the statement, "There is nothing better to make the best tarts"?
As per the lesson that's linked on that page, I thought it would fall under "qualifying something as good/better/the best at what it does, i.e. efficient/practical, or good/better/the best in taste (food)".
Is it instead considered to be "making a general statement with être about something or someone being fine/OK/better/the best" ? It would be helpful if the lesson included "Il y a" in addition to être if so.
Thanks in advance for any clarification!
Can someone please explain to me why passé composé has been used here? We are talking about past habits here.
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