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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,965 questions • 32,475 answers • 1,017,939 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,965 questions • 32,475 answers • 1,017,939 learners
I'm having trouble understanding when to use stress pronouns vs. indirect object pronouns. The sentence "quand un inconnu s'approchait de moi": Why would this not be "quand un inconnu m'approchait"? Would it be different if the verb wasn't reflexive?
In the quick lesson you use the example Ce problème, auquel je ne comprends rien, m'énerve
Why is it auquel and not duquel ( or de qui) since comprendre is a transitive verb ? What am I missing?
Please can you explain the difference between these which both mean "we go". When is it correct to use "on" instead of "nous"?
If you are asking someone their nationality, it is obvious that you do not know the person. In which case, wouldn't the question be informal in any situation?
My computer is not allowing me to type the cedilla. So I am getting all these wrong!
Il ne s’occupe jamais de rien
What is the rule that requires either de or à, as seen in the above sentences?
I am a tactile learner and do better writing these dictées by hand. Is it possible to do the grading (does the grading contribute to the dashboard, even?) by hand and enter the score? The language clicks better in my head writing manually vs typing and I don't want to write and then transcribe into the system. Is there also a way to simply see the transcript without going phrase by phrase?
I can't seem to differentiate these two. Please make me understand.
The first time I did this exercise, I wrote "Je vais etre beau et elegant !" Then, I changed it to: "Je vais avoir l'air beau et elegant !", which was marked wrong. Wouldn't the use of the phrase, "avoir l'air" also be correct in this situation?
Merci beaucoup et bonne continuation !
Please could someone explain why "d'" is used? Why isn't it: et une belle enveloppe decoree? (Please forgive lack of accents within decoree)
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