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14,003 questions • 30,293 answers • 875,271 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,003 questions • 30,293 answers • 875,271 learners
In an exam, would either of those be regarded as more grammatically correct/the preferred answer?
It seems like you are trying to explain two concepts, but aren't explicit about it.First compound subjects take plural verb forms: Sarah et ma soeur sont allées à la plage.
Second the subject pronoun changes form from its singular usage:
je --> moi
tu --> toi
Bonjour à tous,
Could someone explain why these verbs aren't ever used in the imperfect ? I realize there are alternative verbs that can be used, but am just curious about the reason.
Merci !
Hi, in a reversed expression such as
Qu'est-ce qui te plaît chez Anna ?
which is the subject and which is the object?
I’m guessing that the subject is that aspect of Anna’s personality which causes ‘you’ to like her. Therefore, since ‘you’ receive pleasure from that part of her personality, ‘you’ are the object.
Is that correct?
Thanks in advance!
The verb used is “se couvrir” but would ‘la’ precede ‘vous’ ?
Is it that “vous” here is a Reflexive Pronoun ? If so , there is a lesson stating at Kwiziq that reflexive pronouns precede direct object pronouns -
Position of Double Pronouns in French - Reflexive Pronoun + Direct Object Pronoun
I suppose that here vous behaves like an indirect object pronoun. Is this the justification?
Madame, please guide how to figure this out .
Merci encore . Cordialement,
Shrey.
Checking whether these words are interchangeable, or whether there are nuances we should know about:
Parfois vs quelquefois
mare vs. étang vs bassin
morceaux de tomate vs pièces de tomate
Thanks!
This is in one of the green callout boxes in the lesson: "In this negative structure, you only use de or d' in front of a vowel or mute h." This really confused me when I first read it because it seems to say you shouldn't use either one if there's no vowel/mute h. I think a comma or parens would make it clearer: "In this negative structure, you only use de (or d' in front of a vowel or mute h)."
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