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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,885 questions • 32,339 answers • 1,007,880 learners
Hi, is this missing a “longues”?
“so I find the long queues [US: lines] horrible.
Kwizbot's answer:
alors je trouve les queues horribles.
OTHER POSSIBLE ANSWERS:
donc je trouve les queues horribles”
In colloquial French, is the après ever dropped, similar to English.
After having eaten, I did st. = Having eaten, I did st.
Après avoir mangé, j'ai fait qqc., can it be Avoir mangé, j'ai fait qqc. colloquially?
If I said " Elle a les cheveux noir " it is corrdct?
How did you use this word as a sentence because I am very lost on it.
if "vieux" is being qualified by an adverb "extrêmement. so "un extrêmement vieux parchemin" is correct. why is it marked as incorrect
Qu’est ce que différence pour utiliser en ou y
I have noticed that many of the sentences in the dictées start with a dash “-“. Is there a set rule in French for this, or is it just a style choice used here?
In the sentence, "Pauline, tu as l'air plus détendue que d'habitude !", I thought the adjective, détendu, modified the masculine noun, air., i.e. in English relaxed air. The correction implies that détendu modifies Pauline. Correct? So, in the construction of avoir l'air, it is the subject, in this case Pauline, which determines the agreement. Correct?
Referring to Les Filles. "Nous sommes allées en France l'année dernière.
But - Les trois filles sont sorties'
Why isn't it 'sortiees'?
Pauline, tu as l'air plus détendue.I thought détendu would agree with l'air not with subject of sentence.
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