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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,454 questions • 31,301 answers • 933,656 learners
The sentence to which I refer is, Géricault's masterpiece was directly inspired by the tragic shipwreck of the real frigate "The Medusa" in 1816, which fifteen people survived to in atrocious conditions: hunger, thirst and, worst of all, cannibalism. I believe the correct grammar would be "... in which fifteen people survivied in ( or under) atrocious conditions...". The translation to 'auquel' becomes more evident.
What's the difference between:
n'importe qui/quand/quoi/ou/comment
and
peu importe qui/quand/quoi/ou/comment
The correct answer is 'I love him although he is a bit lazy', and not 'I like the fact that he is a bit a bit lazy' but how would the latter answer differ from the example in French?
The phrase "C'est une recette" has a confusing pronunciation, just checking if it is correct?
Quand j'étais jeune, je cousais et créais tous mes costumes, pour moi et mes amis. Plus tard, je préférais me promener en voiture et admirer les maisons joliment décorées.
The hint for La trahison capitalises the title ("La Trahison des Images"), but the answer requires lower case "trahison" and "image". Is there a correct form or can either be used?
In the example above 'Oh là là. Il aime vraiment parler de lui !' why is there no même after lui? Also the 'Je n'aime que moi ?' why no même ?
In the lesson you give these examples:
Mes filles sont toutes honteuses de leur comportement.
Lucie et Juliette sont tout heureuses de se retrouver.
Do both the words honteuses and heureuses not have a mute 'h' and therefore, why is it 'toutes' in one example and 'tout'in the other?
Thanks in advance
Pam
why are you using mon devoir for homework. I thought it should always be mes devoirs
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