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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,911 questions • 29,986 answers • 860,526 learners
Why is this in the subjunctive?
What word would I use in french to refer to ALL the items on a menu or la carte?
Not categories (like Entrees, Aperitifs, etc.), but the general words
In English, I would say "items" I think, but in French, is
"éléments" right?
Just working on something and was curious!
WRITE THE FOLLOWING TIME IN FRENCH USING MOINS LE QUART. 1. 3:45 2. 20:45 3. 21:45 4. 7:45 5. 23:45
In an exercise I should fill in the following gap:
Mon fils ________ aller aux toilettes.
I choose "envie d'" but the solution seems to be "a besoin d'". But one example in the lesson about "Avoir envie de = To feel like, want to (Avoir envie de = To feel like, want to (French Expressions with avoir))" is:
J'ai envie d'aller aux toilettes !I need to go to the toilets!So I would like to know, if both are correct. And if not, how do I choose the right one?
Best regards,
Martin
My french teacher was saying something that sounded like "oo ka duke" today and I don't know what he was saying. It was something to do with either grammer or maybe even something outside of french and just about language. Idk. Any guesses are appreciated (I'm A1/2 level, maybe this is very basic).
I've been told by a well-trained French teacher to never begin a sentence with "cependant." He said to use "bien que." Has this rule been superseded?
Thanks!
Kalpana
In the sentence, Moi, je préfère la bière blonde, Julien préfère la bière brune et Max ne boit que de la bière blanche, the speaker and Julien prefer LA bière but Max drinks only DE LA bière. Why the use of the partitf for Max ?
I received a question to translate "You're laughing while looking at me." where the correct answer is "Vous riez en me regardant."
Doesn't regarder mean "to watch" and voir means "to see"?
Wouldn't "looking" in this case mean "en voyant"?
Thank you for your help.
This exercise seems of a harder level than B2?
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