Invalid Question.
French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,711 questions • 31,879 answers • 970,730 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,711 questions • 31,879 answers • 970,730 learners
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?
I really wish I could take a 10 - 15 question quiz on some of these lessons, like this one. I often feel like two questions is not enough to cement or really learn some of these.
I would have expected devoir to be used here instead of avoir. Could someone clarify? Maybe I'm not understanding the tenses clearly. Thanks!
Is it correct to say "il habite hors de la ville"?
These are the answers to 'quelles que soient les conditions de travail.'
... peu importe les conditions de travail.
... indépendamment des conditions de travail.
Is EN DÉPIT DE also valid?
“Ma petite sœur est rigolote” the vocalisation above clearly emphasises the final e in both petite and rigolote, when at other times, with other speakers, I only hear the final consonant. Is this just a matter of individual accent, or should the final e be clearly pronounced as a general rule?
Find your French level for FREE
And get your personalised Study Plan to improve it
Find your French level