Rebecca's Special Notebook

Notebooks let you save and organize lessons to focus on specific grammar topics. Add lessons, study them, and test your knowledge later.

All the lessons from the very beginning in one place.

Level Kwiziq score Lesson Lesson Award  
A1 : Beginner   On can mean either we/one/people (French Subject Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate avoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb s'habiller in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A0 : Entry Level   Qu'est-ce que c'est... and Qu'est-ce que c'est que ça/cela ? = What is... / What's that? in French
A1 : Beginner   Du/de la/de l'/des all become de/d' in negative sentences (French Partitive Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate venir/tenir and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate prendre and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate verbs in the near future in French using aller + infinitive (Le Futur Proche)
A1 : Beginner   Un/une become de/d' in negative sentences in French (French Indefinite Articles)
A1 : Beginner   C'est quoi, Qu'est-ce que c'est ? = What's that? (French Questions)
A1 : Beginner   Nous vs on to say "we" in French (French Subject Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate faire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate vouloir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate pouvoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate devoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A0 : Entry Level   Conjugate avoir - je/tu/vous forms - in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A0 : Entry Level   Conjugate faire - je/tu/vous forms - in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate -eter and -eler verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent) - main rule (ll / tt)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate -eter and -eler verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent) - with "è"
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate -é(-)er, -e(-)er verbs - except -eter and -eler - in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate croire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate partir/sortir and other irregular -TIR verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb se réveiller in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb se lever in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Colour descriptions change according to gender and number (French Colour Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   "C'est" vs "Il/Elle est" to say it is/she is/he is in French
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending with mute -e don't change in the feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Dans/sur/sous/devant/derrière/entre = in/on top of/under/in front of/behind/between (French Prepositions of Location)
A1 : Beginner   Notre/nos/votre/vos/leur/leurs = our/your/their (French Possessive Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   Forming the feminine of nouns and adjectives ending in "-ien/-ion/-on" in French
A1 : Beginner   En vs Dans with locations (French Prepositions of Location)
A1 : Beginner   Telling time in French - general 12-hour clock rules
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Common mistakes with mon/ma/mes, ton/ta/tes and son/sa/ses (French Possessive Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   Definite articles contract with à and de in French (French Contracted Articles)
A1 : Beginner   À = To/in and De = From/of with cities in French (French Prepositions of Location)
A1 : Beginner   Talking about the weather in French - il y a + [nom]
A1 : Beginner   Using "le" with days of the week + the weekend (French Definite Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending in -eux become -euse in the feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, l', les before nouns when generalising (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Asking yes/no questions in French with intonation, est-ce que, n'est-ce pas (French Questions)
A1 : Beginner   À/en + [means of transportation] (French Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   Venir de/d'/du/des = To come/be from with countries/states/regions and continents (French Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   Jouer de = to play an instrument in French
A1 : Beginner   Ne ... jamais = Never (French Negations)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing numbers 70 to 999 in French
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending in -s or -x change in the plural forms only when feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Expressing large numbers -thousands/millions/billions - in French
A1 : Beginner   Ça m'est égal = I don't mind/care (French Idiomatic Expressions)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing how you are with aller (Greetings in French)
A1 : Beginner   Writing decimal numbers in French
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, les with weights and measures (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Avoir besoin de = To need (French Expressions with avoir)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Prochain/Dernier = Next/Last + [durations] in French
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, les with body parts and clothing (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -au or -eau
A1 : Beginner   Neuf vs nouveau to say new in French
A1 : Beginner   Moi/toi/lui/elle = Me/you/him/her - simple cases (French Stress Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Non plus = Neither/nor (French Negations)
A1 : Beginner   Nous/vous/eux/elles = Us/you/them - simple cases (French Stress Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing possession in French with "être à"
A1 : Beginner   Penser que/Croire que = To think that/To believe that in French
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate semi-regular -cer verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Avoir mal (à) = To be in pain, to hurt somewhere (French Expressions with avoir)
A1 : Beginner   Describing senses with "sentir" - The different meanings of the verb "sentir" in French
A0 : Entry Level   Adjectives usually go AFTER nouns in French (Position of Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verbs in the near future in French using aller + infinitive (Le Futur Proche)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing the close past in French using "venir de" + [infinitive] (Le Passé Proche)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using the present tense (Le Présent) - and not the compound past (Le Passé Composé) - in sentences with "depuis" (since/for) in French (French Prepositions of Time)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate regular -er verbs (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate regular -dre verbs (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using lui/leur = him or her/them (French Indirect Object Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   N'avoir plus de = To have none left (French Negations)
A1 : Beginner   Adjectives ending in -er become -ère in the feminine in French
A1 : Beginner   Compound nouns formed with prepositions à/de/en in French
A1 : Beginner   Ordinal numbers - 1st/2nd/10th/etc - in French
A1 : Beginner   Avoir peur de = To be afraid/scared of (French Expressions with avoir)
A1 : Beginner   Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -eu
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate mettre and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate lire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Ordinal vs Cardinal numbers - Differences between French and English usages
A1 : Beginner   Tout le monde = Everybody/Everyone (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Ça y est = That's it/It's done (French Idiomatic Expressions)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb s'asseoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Compound nouns formed with [noun] + à + [infinitive] in French
A1 : Beginner   Ça ne fait rien = It doesn't matter (French Idiomatic Expressions)
A1 : Beginner   Surnames don't pluralise in French
A1 : Beginner   Du/de la/de l'/des = Some/any (French Partitive Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Using "si" instead of "oui" to disagree with a negative question or statement in French
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -dre verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Quel/quels/quelle/quelles ? = Which/what? (French Question Words)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... rien = Nothing (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Il y a + [durée] = [duration] + ago (French Expressions of Time)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate regular -ir verbs (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate faire (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate avoir (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate être (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Agreeing past participle with subject's gender and number with (+ être) verbs in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate reflexive verbs (+être) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate regular verbs in the imperfect tense in French (L'Imparfait)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing continuing action with the imperfect tense in French (L'Imparfait)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing past habits or repeated actions with the imperfect tense in French (L'Imparfait)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Que + [inverted statement] ? = What ... ? (French Questions)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Difference between subjects, objects and pronouns - Grammar Point
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Monter dans, descendre de = To get on, off transportation in French (prepositions)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Aimer = to love, like something/someone in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using le/la/l'/les = it/him/her/them (French Direct Object Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Ça = that/this/it (French Demonstrative Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb se coucher in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   An vs année, matin vs matinée, jour vs journée, soir vs soirée to express a time unit or a duration in French
A0 : Entry Level   Avoir chaud/froid = To be hot/cold (French Expressions with avoir)
A0 : Entry Level   When not to use un/une while stating people's occupations or professions in French (Zero Article)
A0 : Entry Level   Expressing dates in French
A0 : Entry Level   Job titles differ in French depending on whether you're a man or a woman (nouns)
A0 : Entry Level   Avoir [nombre] ans = To be [number] years old (French Expressions with avoir)
A0 : Entry Level   Most adjectives can be made feminine by adding -e in French
A0 : Entry Level   Adjectives of nationalities vary depending on gender in French (French Adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   Être d'accord avec = to agree with (French Expressions with être)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate boire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Talking about the weather in French - il fait + [adjectif]
A1 : Beginner   Expressing ongoing actions in the present in French with "être en train de"
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate dire and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   En/l'/au with seasons (French Articles and Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   C'est, ce sont = this is, these are (French Demonstrative Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Ne ... pas = Not - with simple tenses (French Negations)
A1 : Beginner   Expressing timeliness in French - late/early/on time - general
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate aller in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   À côté de, en face de, à l'extérieur de, à l'intérieur de, près de, loin de, au coin de (French Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   Pour + [infinitive] = In order to + [do] in French
A1 : Beginner   Expressing current actions, habits and situations (English Present Tense) with the present tense (Le Présent) in French
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate regular -er verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Forming regular adverbs with "-ment" in French (French Adverbs)
A0 : Entry Level   Je viens de + [ville] = I'm from + [city] in French
A0 : Entry Level   Il y a = There is/There are in French
A0 : Entry Level   Je becomes j' with verbs beginning with a vowel in French (Elision)
A0 : Entry Level   Conjugate aller - je/tu/vous forms - in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate semi-regular -ger verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, les with titles, languages and academic subjects (definite articles)
A1 : Beginner   Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -al
A1 : Beginner   Ne ... pas = Not - with reflexive verbs in simple tenses (French Negations)
A1 : Beginner   Me/te/nous/vous = Me/you/us/you (French Direct and Indirect Object Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate dormir and other -MIR verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Forming the feminine of adjectives ending in "-el/-eil/-il/-ul/-et/some in -s" in French
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate écrire/inscrire in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   Chez = at someone's place (French Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb se laver in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A1 : Beginner   En/au/aux = In/to with countries and continents (French Prepositions)
A1 : Beginner   Using le, la, l', les with continents, countries & regions names (definite articles)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using the infinitive form of verbs to express the English "-ING"
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas du tout = Not at all (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   "Ma" becomes "mon" with feminine nouns starting with a vowel or mute h (French Possessive Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing "to find" and opinions with the verb "trouver" in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Bien, mal, mieux, moins, peu (Irregular French Adverbs)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   "Sentir bon" vs "Se sentir bien" - The different meanings of the verb "sentir" in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Avoir raison/tort/de la chance = To be right/wrong/lucky (French Expressions with avoir)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing you like something/someone in French with the verb "plaire"
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ce/cet/cette and ces = this/that and these/those (French Demonstrative Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Aller à = to suit someone (French Expressions with aller)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... plus = No more/no longer (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate semi-regular -oyer/-ayer/-uyer verbs in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Tout/tous/toute/toutes = Everything/all (of them)/whole/completely in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming adverbs from adjectives ending in a vowel in French (French Adverbs)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Visiter vs Rendre visite à whether you visit a place or a person
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions in the present tense (Le Présent) in French - regular forms (except il/elle/on forms)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Object Pronouns - with negations
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming the feminine of adjectives ending in -f in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming the feminine of adjectives ending in -c in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming the feminine of adjectives ending in -oux + "faux" in French
B1 : Intermediate   Animals names are often different for male, female and baby in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate savoir in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Adverbs - general rule
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing "to walk" with se promener/promener/marcher/aller à pied in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using restrictive ne … que to express only with simple tenses (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... personne = No one/nobody (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using manquer (à) to say you miss someone or something emotionally in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Connaître vs savoir = to know something vs to know how to do in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using manquer (de) to say you/something miss or lack in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate voir and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate connaître/paraître and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Plus ... que/Moins ... que/Aussi ... que = More ... than/Less ... than/As ... as (Comparisons with Adjectives in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Moi/toi/lui/elle/soi/nous/vous/eux/elles - advanced usages (French Stress Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Plus ... que/Moins ... que/Aussi ... que = More ... than/Less ... than/As ... as (Comparisons with Adverbs in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Qui/Qui est-ce que ... ? = Whom ... ? (French Questions)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Autre chose/quelque chose d'autre = Something else (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing quantities in French with quelques/plusieurs/de nombreux = A few/several/many
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... aucun(e) = None (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions in the present tense (Le Présent) in French - il/elle/on forms
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas assez (de) = Not enough (of) (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming adverbs from adjectives ending in -ant and -ent in French (French Adverbs)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Plus que/Moins que/Autant que = More than/Less than/As much as (Comparisons with Verbs in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... ni ... ni = Neither ... nor (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   D'autres vs des autres = others (French Indefinite Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Me becomes moi in affirmative commands in the imperative mood (L'Impératif) in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using object pronouns le/la/les vs lui/leur in affirmative commands in the imperative mood (L'Impératif) in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Faire mal à vs Faire du mal à = to hurt someone (French Expressions with faire)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming simple negative commands with the imperative mood in French (L'Impératif)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Chacun/chacune/chaque = each one/each (French Indefinite Adjectives and Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas = Not - with compound tenses (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Object Pronouns - with compound tenses
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Faire peur (à) = To scare someone (French Expressions with faire)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   After/before versus in front of/behind (French Prepositions of Time and Place)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Adverbs - with compound tenses
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing for + [duration] in French with either pendant/durant/depuis/pour (French Prepositions of Time)
A1 : Beginner   Il/elle/ils/elles = it/he/she/they (French Subject Pronouns)
A1 : Beginner   Beau, nouveau, vieux have different plural forms for masculine and feminine (French Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Se souvenir de/Se rappeler (de) = To remember something in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing timeliness in French - late/early - precise
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing intervals of dates and times in French = from ... to ...
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Some plural English nouns are singular in French and vice versa
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas grand-chose = Not ... much (French Negations)
B1 : Intermediate   Rappeler [à quelqu'un] = to remind [someone] in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Le mien/le tien/le sien/etc = Mine/yours/his/hers/its (French Possessive Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   De plus en plus / De moins en moins + [adverbe/adjectif/verbe] = more and more / less and less + [adverb/adjective/verb] (Comparisons in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Frais, long, favori, rigolo have irregular feminine forms (French adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   En vs Dans with time (French Prepositions of Time)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using son/sa/ses to express possession with personne/tout le monde/chacun/il faut (French Possessive Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using notre/nos versus son/sa/ses with "on" depending on its meaning (French Possessive Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Le nôtre/le vôtre/le leur/etc = Ours/yours/theirs (French Possessive Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Faire partie de = To be part of (French Expressions with faire)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate -aindre, -eindre, -oindre verbs (+ avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   De plus en plus de / de moins en moins de + [nom] = more and more / less and less + [nouns] (Comparisons in French)
A1 : Beginner   Avoir envie de = To feel like, want to (French Expressions with avoir)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Quel/quelle/quels/quelles + [nom] = What a [noun] (French Exclamative Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing opinions and describing with the imperfect tense in French (L'Imparfait)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing ongoing actions in the past in French: être en train de
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Faire confiance (à) = To trust (French Expressions with faire)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Forming the plural of French nouns ending in -ou
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Avoir l'habitude de = To be in the habit of, to tend to (French Expressions with avoir)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions in the present tense (Le Présent) in French - with names/things/emphasis
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Some French nouns have different meanings depending on whether they're masculine or feminine
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Le plus/Le moins = The most/the least (Superlative with Adverbs in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Demi/moitié/etc = Half in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas encore = Not yet (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Doing arithmetic in French - addition, subtraction, multiplication, division
A2 : Lower Intermediate   S'en aller = To leave in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions in the present tense (Le Présent) in French - special cases "puis-je/ai-je/suis-je"
A2 : Lower Intermediate   N'importe quoi = Nonsense, anything (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Ne ... pas non plus = Not ... either (French Negations)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Faire exprès (de) = To do something on purpose (French Expressions with faire)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   En with quantities = Of them (French Adverbial Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Object Pronouns - with simple tenses
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using French Stress Pronouns in compound subjects and objects (unlike English)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate suivre (+avoir) in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Qu'est-ce qui + [conjugated verb] = What [does]... (French Questions)
A1 : Beginner   Devoir vs Avoir besoin de to express "to need to" in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Avoir honte de = to be ashamed of (French Expressions with avoir)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Position of French Object Pronouns - with infinitives
A0 : Entry Level   Describing things in French with c'est = it is
A0 : Entry Level   Le/la/l' = The (French Definite Articles)
A0 : Entry Level   Je voudrais vs je veux to say that you want something in French
A0 : Entry Level   Un/une = A or An (French Indefinite Articles)
A1 : Beginner   Using nous/vous/ils/elles to replace compound subjects (French Subject Pronouns)
A0 : Entry Level   Avoir faim/soif = To be hungry/thirsty (French Expressions with avoir)
A0 : Entry Level   Plurals of the and a = les and des (articles) in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Special cases when you use mon/ma/mes/etc with parts of the body (French Possessive Adjectives)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Which form of the conjugated verb to pick between nous/vous/ils/elles in cases with multiple subjects (French Subject Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using [French stress pronouns] + même(s) to express "myself/yourself/etc" in French
A0 : Entry Level   Most French nouns take an -s in the plural unless they already end in -s, -x, -z
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Quelqu'un/Quelqu'un d'autre = Someone/Someone else (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Adjectives after personne, rien, tout le monde, quelqu'un are always masculine in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Y = There (French Adverbial Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate suivre/vivre and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A0 : Entry Level   Saying your name with Je m'appelle/Tu t'appelles/Vous vous appelez
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using "une dizaine" and other approximate numbers in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   L'autre/Les autres = The other one(s) (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Le/la même and Les mêmes = The same (French Indefinite Pronouns)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions in the compound past (Le Passé Composé) in French - with subject pronouns
B1 : Intermediate   Meilleur, mieux, pire / plus mauvais, plus mal = better, best, worse and worst in French (irregular comparatives and superlatives)
B1 : Intermediate   Using neuter pronouns le or l' to refer to previously mentioned ideas (French Direct Object Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Qui = Who/which/that (French Relative Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate être in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate faire in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate avoir in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate aller in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Quand/pendant que + future tense (Le Futur Simple) - not the present tense = When/while I do something in the future (Sequence of Tenses in French)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate devoir in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate voir/envoyer in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Ce que (vs ce qui) = what/which (French Relative Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Y can replace à + [thing/object/location] (French Adverbial Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   En can replace de + [phrase] (French Adverbial Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Même can mean "same", "itself", "very", "exact" and "precise" as an adjective, and "even" as an adverb in French
B1 : Intermediate   Plus... plus..., moins... moins... = the more...the more..., the less...the less... (comparisons with phrases)
B1 : Intermediate   Ce qui (vs ce que) = what/which (French Relative Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Que = Whom/which/that (French Relative Pronouns)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate devoir in the conditional present in French = should (Le Conditionnel Présent)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate pouvoir in the conditional present in French = could (Le Conditionnel Présent)
B1 : Intermediate   En + "-ant" = While/by + "-ing" in French (Gerund/Le Gérondif)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate avoir in the conditional present in French (Le Conditionnel Présent)
B1 : Intermediate   Aucun/e … ne = None (French Negations)
B1 : Intermediate   Personne ne ..., rien ne ... = No one, nothing (negation) in French
A0 : Entry Level   J'habite à + [ville] = I live in + [city] in French
B1 : Intermediate   Ne ... nulle part = Nowhere (French Negations)
B1 : Intermediate   Ni l'un(e) ni l'autre ne ... = Neither (one nor the other) (French Negations)
B1 : Intermediate   Using restrictive ne … que to express only with compound tenses (French Negations)
A0 : Entry Level   Most adjectives can be made plural by adding -s in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Le plus/Le moins = The most/the least (Superlative with Verbs in French)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using "devoir" in the imperfect tense versus the compound past in French (L'Imparfait vs Le Passé Composé)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Using the compound tense (Le Passé Composé) on its own or with the imperfect tense (L'Imparfait)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Inverted questions with reflexive verbs in the present tense (Le Présent) in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate cueillir and derivatives in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A0 : Entry Level   Using Tu and Vous to express three types of you in French (French Subject Pronouns)
A0 : Entry Level   Position of French Adjectives - Short and common adjectives that go BEFORE nouns
A1 : Beginner   Expressing immediate and near-future actions with the present tense (Le Présent) in French
A1 : Beginner   Mon, ma, mes; ton, ta, tes; son, sa, ses = my; your; his / her in French (French possessive adjectives)
A1 : Beginner   À + [heure] = At + [time] in French
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Conjugate conduire and other -uire verbs in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
B2 : Upper Intermediate   Plus de ... que/Moins de ... que/Autant de ... que = More ... than/Less ... than/As much/many ... as (Comparisons with Nouns in French)
B1 : Intermediate   Better and better, worse and worse = de mieux en mieux, de pire en pire (Comparisons in French)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate vouloir in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate pouvoir in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate courir in the future tense in French (Le Futur Simple)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Qui/Qui est-ce qui [conjugated verb] ? = Who ... ? (French Questions)
B1 : Intermediate   Conjugate paraître/connaître and derivatives (+ avoir) - except apparaître and naître - in the compound past in French (Le Passé Composé)
B1 : Intermediate   Dernier = final/previous (French Adjectives that change meaning according to position)
B1 : Intermediate   Differences between French and English usages - Passer un exam vs To pass an exam
B1 : Intermediate   Avoir un exam = To pass an exam (French Expressions with avoir)
B1 : Intermediate   Passer can be used with avoir or être in compound tenses depending on its meaning in French (Le Passé Composé)
B1 : Intermediate   Ancien = former/old (French Adjectives that change meaning according to position)
B1 : Intermediate   Cher= dear/expensive (French Adjectives that change meaning according to position)
B1 : Intermediate   Certain = specific / sure in French (adjectives that change meaning according to position)
A1 : Beginner   Conjugate reflexive verb s'amuser in the present tense in French (Le Présent)
A2 : Lower Intermediate   Expressing necessity and obligation in French with "il faut"
A1 : Beginner   Standalone adjectives after c'est are always masculine
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