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14,038 questions • 30,404 answers • 882,107 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,038 questions • 30,404 answers • 882,107 learners
Sans rien - “without nothing“. In English this would be a double negative and would therefore theoretically mean “with something”. But in French would we always say “sans rien” or could we also say “avec rien”?
I don't understand why this sentence is indicative form?
Tu penses qu'il est bon pour elle?For question or negation, I suppose we should use subjuctive form along with penser:
Tu penses qu'il soit bon pour elle?
Please help to explain it?
Merci.
Le rose va à ma sœur. Pink suits my sister. To say “Pink suits her”. Would it be: Le rose la va. I base this on the quiz... Ces chassures nous vont. (Correct). Ces chassures vont á nous. (Incorrect)
I am trying to figure out the English translate for 'donc je vais me régaler'
Does it mean:
1) so I am going to enjoy.
2) so I am going to feast.
When you replace the direct object by a direct object pronoun (le/la/l'/les), it moves before the verb. That's when the past participle has to agree.Et la télé ? - Il l'a regardée.- What about TV? - He watched it.
BUT!I don't know whether the rule is valid for for "me,te,nous,vous,?
Tu nous ai regardé(e)s or Tu nous ai regardé
Hi
How come there is no subjunctive after 'Il faut dire que'?
Merci
Megan
I hope a grammar lesson based on character traits chart with gender and number
How to conjugate the verbs "to be" and "to have"
Is it feminine because of 'assistance' (despite the subject being 'un peu'...)?
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