French The Pronoun “en”
As you’ve seen, French grammar can be complex. With most grammatical concepts, there are usually additional rules and exceptions that you have to remember. Many words have more than one …
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As you’ve seen, French grammar can be complex. With most grammatical concepts, there are usually additional rules and exceptions that you have to remember. Many words have more than one …
Yes, it’s true… the letter “y” is actually a word in French! It’s pronounced “E,” and it’s an adverbial pronoun. It most often represents/replaces a place and can be translated …
The concept of indirect object pronouns in French is the same as it is in English. An indirect object pronoun replaces the indirect object in a sentence. In English, indirect …
In the previous module, you learned about replacing direct objects with direct object pronouns in sentences. An important component to that is understanding the new and different placement of the …
The concept of direct object pronouns in French is the same as it is in English. A direct object pronoun replaces the direct object in a sentence. It directly receives …
Let’s do this next! Study your French! Go to bed early! You have most likely used the imperative mood without realizing it. The imperative mood is used when you give …
The passive voice, or la voix passive, is used to describe an action that is being done to a subject by an agent of the remaining sentence. It differs from …
The superlative is used when you want to say that a noun is “the most” or “the least” of something. In English, the superlative is often identifiable by its -est …
The comparative is used when you want to compare two or more things to each other. The three degrees of comparison are superiority, inferiority, and equality. Here are examples in …
In English, a relative pronoun translates to words like “that,” “who,” or “which.” The dog that barks the loudest is named Max. I bought a dress that you are going …