Everything you need to learn French! I created this channel after realizing that people want to learn French but have no time, money, or have trouble keeping what they already learned! Every lesson has a free PDF that you can download on my website. Want to stay informed? Click "Subscribe" and turn on the notifications to never miss a video and get your French going!
After many many questions about it, I officially moved to Canada in 2019, but I teach Academic French 😉 I can not speak Quebecois anyways 😅
merci beaucoup dylane,🤗 Could you please explain to me why did you use "verbe être" instead of "verbe aller" at the expression of "aller trop loin"? I hope you to have a nice one et je vous remercier une fois de plus pour toutes ces belles vidéos.
I found this very helpful, thank you. May I ask : You've said that the meaning of 'Pourtant' is 'On the other side'. In English we have a saying 'On the other hand'. Is this the same meaning ? Merc.
The first time I got to the end of this video I still didn't understand a whole lot of what you'd spoken about, Direct Objects, Direct object pronouns seem to get over complicated in my brain and it becomes fuzzy but after a couple of months of studying and exercises I came back to this lesson as part of the grammar course and it makes much more sense. It helps to know that even if something doesn't make sense, with time and patience it will hopefully fall into place. It's great to be able to come back and redo lessons and/or go back on the books to recap
I really love this course and especially this lesson. I am confused, however, and hope that you can respond. I know that the "e" is silent in a word like "la rue," but when you pronounce it in the lesson there is definitely some remnant of the "e" sound there. The same is true with other words. I've heard this when other French teachers pronounce words standing alone, though not in a full sentence with other words. I would appreciate it if you could explain.
Hi Dylane, one day can you do a video on the French lines in the song Michelle by the Beatles? They don’t translate the English to French word for word but is it a correct sentence? Merci!
So, would the Imparfait be the Past Continuous Tense in English, and the Passe Compose, the Plain Past Tense? These two actions happening at the same time would give us the Participle Mood. I am from South Africa and started studying on my own two months ago. I speak Afrikaans and English and isiXhosa which is an African Language and studied German and Latin at school. I must say, the French Pronunciation is very difficult because I am used to sharp sound like German. My dentist lived in Franch for 11 years and are fluent, she is like my daughter, so I thought I would surprize her my learning French. I am also her isiXhosa teacher. Allow me to say that you really are an EXCELLENT teacher. Regards. Litrisia
Hello Dylane. you're doing a super work. please I would like you to make a video on the difference between faire and prépare. they are quite confusing. thank you.
If people are actually learning Chinese or Japanese or German or any other hard language to learn why can’t I learn French with ease and confidence !? to be fair no matter how hard is it to learn French there nothing close to it compared to Japanese or Chinese when it comes to how difficult it is all about dedication and commitment and perseverance and the willingness that many learners lack By the way English it’s not my first language neither is French I love your channel
Hi. I am on chapter 2 "the Preposition De" and am a bit confused. de+l' = le l' but in the example it is Une bouteille d'eau and in the exercise 2.7 question 1 I wrote Je suis de l' accord avec toi! but the answer states Je suis d'accord. Could you please help me out. Merci beaucoup!!
Amazing video, I got 17/18 (missed C2 q2)! One question - for A2 q1, shouldn't it be "quelle question est-ce que tu as POSÉE", and not demandée? Thanks Dylane :)