French language Q&A Forum
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,782 questions • 29,536 answers • 841,477 learners
Questions answered by our learning community with help from expert French teachers
13,782 questions • 29,536 answers • 841,477 learners
Why is there a le in the dependent clause that begins with bien que
From the answers I see to this question in this discussion, we are expected to look through something like 1200 verb conjugations to find which ones fit this category. Even on the Lawless site for Irregular ir verbs, it lists the irregular ir verbs, but only one that changes in the future to an er verb conjugation. Where can one get a simple list of the ir verbs that change to er verb conjugations in the future tense?
During the exercise, per the bot, "tomates-cerises" is correct. However, the finished text has "tomates cerises" with no hyphen. Which is correct?
"Là, une multitude d'étals de poissons fraîchement pêchés aiguisaient l'appétit des passants"
I don't understand the plural here: Isn't it "Une multitude d'étals" - multitude being singular - which is the subject of the verb - rather than "D'étals" themselves, which would be plural.
I'm trying to devine whether there is some rule at work here here, or whether it's pretty much optional.
Why can't we say "N'importe que se passe" to say "Whatever happens"
I was surprised to see my use of "cet après-midi" corrected to "cette après-midi". So I looked it up and found that both genders are used for that phrase.
I selected nationality with Capital letter, but it says I selected lower case
Hello,
I was wondering, for this question:
Il y a un ________ arbre près de la vieille fenêtre.why the answer is vieil and not vieux, like from the list on adjectives that go before nouns?
Find your French level for FREE
Test your French to the CEFR standard
Find your French level