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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,671 questions • 31,786 answers • 963,088 learners
There are two examples of the verb, s'avérer, in this exercise:
1) Et les compétences que j'ai acquises comme avocate se sont avérées inestimables dans ce nouveau domaine.
2) Ce changement se sera avéré être la meilleure chose que tu aies jamais faite.
My dictionary translates s'avérer as "prove to be" or "turn out to be". In the second example, the infinitive être is added to s'avérer whereas in the first it is absent. Is être optional? If the 'to be' is included in the definition, why is être necessary in the second example?
Maybe its just me, but that last line sounds a lot more like, "Ça va êtes sympa." I know that is grammatically incorrect and I put être, but it sure doesn't sound like être to me.
When to use ‘je me sens’ and when ‘je sens’! The question was "Je ne sens rien." can mean?: and one correct answer was 'I don’t feel anything'. I thought that was incorrect as ‘me’ was needed for ‘feel' , but seemingly not, so when is it? Couldf someone explain please?
Since the speaker is trying to sound like a ghost, the pronunciation suffers on this one. Just one glaring example - the last sentence, "c'est" sounds like "si".
I had written this as plural: "différentes combinaisions lors des combats", but on listening again, what was said before it was clearly "à" rather than "aux", so I changed it to singular: "à différente combinaision lors de combats".
Since it is actually plural - which certainly makes more sense! - I cannot understand why it isn't "aux différentes combinaisions" ?
I was doing the quiz and there was 2 answers that were the same. I picked the first one and got it wrong because it was the second one. Can someone fix this?
Un excellent travail sur le subjonctif et le vocabulaire. J’ai recopié les exercices B2 et C1 de cette semaine pour les réviser plus tard. Merci! : )
The correction function (redlining showing errors and corrections) did not work. It gave correct answers and alternatives but did not correct my text.
In this lesson about de/d'in front of adjectives preceding nouns, there are examples:
des endroits magnifiques
de magnifiques gâteaux
I understand the point about using de when the adjective precedes, but why is magnifique used both before and after the nouns in these examples?
When writing the answers to the question I seem to be wrong every time. If I use de peur que the answer shows as de crainte que, if I use de crainte que it shows as de peur que. I’m struggling to tell the difference.
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