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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,800 questions • 32,069 answers • 984,708 learners
Hello,
I need to make my TEF french test in 8 months and I am looking to reach B2 in reading, writing, speaking and listening. I am currently at A0 (I am much better than A0 but I would like to start there). How should I go about studying from A0 to B2 to reach my goal? What should I start with (grammar? listening?), how should i go about studying every day that mixes everything in? Is the vocabulary on the website good enough for a high B2 for my exam?
It would be far more helpful if the help section here expanded on all options that they put into the multiple choice answers.
not the same thing as "Jack down the giant down" [unspecified if from a cupboard, shelf, or stairway"
My question was asked below, but the answers provided did not address my confusion.
One example given in this lesson is "Si nous l'avions choisi, nous l'aurions regretté".
A previous lesson on 'if-then" sentences (Imperfect usage - hypothesis | French Grammar | Progress with Lawless French) says the following:
"You can never use Le Passé Composé nor other past tenses in this context."
I took this to mean that all if-then sentences must use an "imparfait + conditionel présent" form.
But here we are using the plus-que-parfait and the conditional passé in an if-then sentence. There is no mention of the plus-que-parfait + conditional passé form in the lesson linked to above.
Can you please clarify the rules around using plus-que-parfait + conditional present in 'if-then' sentences?
Thanks.
Why do we use the verb "rencontrer" instead of "retrouver". They already know each other.
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In a recent Kwizbot about the article with days of the week/weekend, an example was given « Ce weekend, on est allés au Futuroscope ». Why is the past particle plural? « We » is implied but the subject is « on ».
I will be well rested Kwizbot answer: " je serai bien reposé."
I translated as: "je me serai bien reposé."
Pose TOUT sur la table. Why not use TOUS as there are more than one item to put on the table. Merci, Diana
In reference to the rule which is explained at the end of the lesson after the examples, isn't there something extra going on in the reflexive verbs which follow the pattern of eler/ eter like 'se rappeler'? For example, we have je me rappelle in the present, but je me rappelais in the imperfect, so we don't just add 'ais' to the stem of the conjugation in the present in this instance, right?
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