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Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
14,640 questions • 31,735 answers • 958,880 learners
Could someone clarify why imperfect is used in the above example? I thought it would be future (je viendra). The linked lesson is "Expressing continuing action with the imperfect tense in French" but this does not seem like a continuing action? And the rest of the sentence is in future tense as well.
Thanks in advance!
I am struggling to see why you have suggested one can use i or y but when I use the y in the answer of the verb, it is wrong.
In the first line, Le pourquoi du comment translates to the whys and hows. Shouldnt le pourquoi du comment be "The why of the how". Please explain the difference between these things. Merci
How are these graded? My answers were mostly correct, maybe just getting the punctuation wrong or a few minor mistakes here and there. But it says I got 0 out of 60. Is it looking for letter-by-letter accuracy, including punctuation?
So, for words that end in -re, we drop the "d" as well?
shoukdnt this be bonne? and not bon? to agree with la vanille below? "Tu préfères le chocolat ou la vanille ?
- La vanille, c'est bon, mais le chocolat, c'est meilleur !Do you prefer chocolate or vanilla?
- Vanilla is good, but chocolate is better!
Why is there no listening in this listening excercise? I feel like you people need to fix this
I enjoyed the accompanying fill-in-the-blanks quiz, but wondered why there’s a COD in "l’assaisonner avec du sel" but none in the next phrase "faire rissoler dans une poêle" although both have "it" in the English sentences? The Kwiz doesn’t accept "faire dorer/revenir" but I guess that’s because they aren’t options given in the vocabulary list.
Is it commoner to issue a set of instructions using only infinitives? The French-style lemon tart writing exercise used the imperative throughout.
https://progress.lawlessfrench.com/my-languages/french/exercises/overview/1598?isRetake=1
So will "tous les campings n'acceptent pas les chiens" be generally understood as "not all campsites accept dogs" rather than "all campsites don't accept dogs"? This is surprising to an English speaker!
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