In the phrase, "Bonjour Lucile, nous assistons en direct à un début de course palpitant...", 'palpitant' seems to agree with 'début' instead of 'course'. I would think that the course is thrilling rather than its début. Is it because le début de course is a compound noun and, if so, the agreement would always be with the principle part, in this case début ?
Agreement of the adjective, palpitant
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Frank C.Kwiziq Q&A regular contributor
Agreement of the adjective, palpitant
This question relates to:French dictation exercise "Live from the Olympic rowing event"
Asked 4 months ago
Hi Frank,
Although the 'course' can indeed be 'palpitante', in grammar the adjective has to agree with the subject which is 'le début de course'.
At this point, we wouldn't know whether the whole of the 'course' has been 'palpitante'.
Bonne Continuation !
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