French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,721 questions • 31,894 answers • 972,168 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,721 questions • 31,894 answers • 972,168 learners
My immediate instinct was to use "Attention ! Le mélange ne devrait pas trop chaud," but it was marked incorrect. In this particular context, is there a hard reason why it is better to use "Le mélange ne doit pas être trop chaud" instead?
Why is "les distances de sécurité" plural here?
Could I chose freely which one to use or there are some circumstance need to be consider?
I was speaking to a French woman today and I said, "My eyes didn't itch":
Mes yeux n'ont pas démangé. Elle m'a corrige est dit : Mes yeux ne m'ont pas démangé.
If the latter is correct, do you use 'me'because you're talking about a body part? If so wouldn't you use "sont"? Or , is there some other explanation?
Why are we using de in front of faisons in the last sentence ?
I tried to use the latter and I believe that it was not accepted. Is there a distinction such that it's usage in this context would be inappropriate? Thanks.
Why us GOT? I realise that "I've got"is frequently used by English speakers, but I've is a contraction of "I have", therefore the use of Got in the sentence is unnecessary, and poor English.
Hello, why is it:
Mon village favori ?
and
Mon village préféré?
Its not spoken about the past? And if, why "favori"?
Are both of them correct and both can be used equally?
- Je me suis arrêtée d’aller à la salle de sport.
- J'ai arrêté d'aller à la salle de sport.
[I stopped going to the gym.]
Find your French level for FREE
And get your personalised Study Plan to improve it
Find your French level