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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,716 questions • 31,889 answers • 971,711 learners
I repeatedly fall foul over “docteur” vs “médecin(e)”, and became even more confused with the phrase “why do you want to see the doctor” when the call was made to see the dentist. So I’m thinking, should it be “want to see the doctor Bernard”. My understanding is “docteur” is the title, and “médicin(e)” is the profession, and in this case “le dentist”. And then I’m tripped up by “teeth cleaning” when in practice you would probably say “a descale” but that didn’t come to mind at the time !
I want lessons on pronunciation, reading comprehension , listening and conjugation but I want them one at a time.
La réponse du kwizbot pour "Maybe they will know someone here" est : « Peut-être qu'ils connaitront quelqu'un ici » mais d'après mon dictionnaire et Deepl, ce devrait être « connaîtront »
Espérons-le que « espérons-le » suffice pour exprimer "hopefully"
Does the site have information on the colloquial uses of tenir? "Je vous tiendrai au courant." I'll keep you informed, so it's the metaphorical meaning of keep, not hold or take. There must be other examples.
Le dimanche implique tous les dimanches, non ? Donc je pense que la réponse donnée n'est pas exactement correcte.
You explain the sound of é as the first half of the vowel in ‘name’. Why don’t you describe it as the vowel in english words like fit or in?
In the sentence, ”I still do it nowadays from time to time.”, I used ”de nos jours” instead of ”aujourd'hui” and it was not accepted. Should it be included as a possibility?
He is an excellent hitter. Why "c'est" instead of "il est"?
Pourquoi est-ce que le imparfait est utilisé dans cet exercise?
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