Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. If you love it, please consider making a one-time or monthly donation. Your support is entirely optional but tremendously appreciated. When asking someone to make a choice between two or more things, you need the interrogative adjective quel, meaning "which" or "what." - Lawless French.

  2. Indirect speech requires a reporting verb to take the place of the quotation marks used in direct speech. The reporting verb must be followed by the subordinating conjunction que (usually) or si, with the original utterance turned into a subordinate clause. The most common reporting verb is dire (to say, tell) but there are many others.

  3. In French, time is usually based on the 24-hour clock, like military time. Instead of 1 to 11 a.m., followed by 12 to 11 p.m., the clock continues counting up from 12, so that 1 p.m. is 13, 2 p.m. is 14, all the way up to 24. Midnight itself can be stated as minuit, 24h00, or 0h00, but one minute later, 24 disappears: 0h01, 0h02, etc.

  4. Lawless French offers two different French word-of-the-day levels. 1) Beginning / intermediate mot du jour. French word and English translation posted on Twitter and Facebook 7 days a week. (free) * See an example * See the latest *. 2) Intermediate / advanced mot du jour.

  5. Connectives are links: they combine words, phrases, or sentences. Connectives do not constitute a single part of speech, but rather a category of terms including all conjunctions and prepositions as well as certain types of adverbs and pronouns used in this way. - Lawless French

  6. There are five different kinds of French personal pronouns, some of which are identical, which can make it tricky to grasp which is which. Click the links for detailed lessons on each type of personal pronoun, or test yourself on using them below. If you have trouble with these, be sure to bookmark The Pronommeur for easy look-ups in the future.

  7. French Simple Past. The passé simple is a single-word past tense, equivalent to English’s simple past, aka preterit – at least when speaking strictly about the conjugation. Unlike the simple past, the passé simple is a literary tense and is thus limited to formal writing, such as literature, journalism, and historical accounts.