Hello Alexa again! I could spot all the mistakes of the given sentences fewer 5 seconds, cuz every day I watched one of your video lessons to improve my French skills. Finally they helped me a lot. Thank you very much! 😍
2:45 In French we need to use avoir and => Mais si ! On peut écrire " il est agé de 25 ans " 3:50 In fact => Mais si ! Si le et les représentent les pronoms, on doit écrire par exemple : j'ai envie de le/de les voir. 8:24 The direct object always comes before the indirect object => Pas toujours : Je te/vous (COI) la (COD) donne. 😁
I love your videos, I started learning French a couple of weeks ago and you have helped me a lot to be ahead of the class. I can't watch anyone else french videos without feeling I am "cheating" on you, nobody is as charismatic and a better teacher than you!
Great video, thanks for posting. It shows me that I have lots of work ahead of me. I only got the first one right :(. I'll try it again in a few months. Merci 💙🇫🇷💙
Bonjour,, thanks for your lessons they are very helpful,, I have a question that I asked people lives in France and they didn't know the answer My question is" in road signs we see signs like" Val de loire" for example and others with "du" what's the difference between them and when can I use de or du Thank you..
@@grouloulle thank you Thats leads me to another question Some sentences contains" de la" and others contains just " de"!! How can i tell the diffrence?
1) Ma copine est américaine. = My girlfriend is American. 2) Il a 25 ans. = He is 25 years old (literally "He has 25 years"). 3) Est-ce que tu peux acheter du pain, s'il te plaît? = Can you buy some bread, please? (basically) 4) Nous ne sommes pas venus à la fête hier. = We didn't come to the party yesterday. 5) Mes sœurs sont parties ce matin. = My sisters have gone out this morning. 6) Tu peux donner la bouteille à ton frère? Oui, je la lui donne. = Can you give the bottle to your brother? Yes, I give it to him (literally "Yes, I it to him give"; French sentence structure can get a bit weird to us English speakers).
Please tell how to use de and du when it comes to 'of' I always used to be get confused 😓😓 And what is difference between chaque jouer and Tous as it both means everyday
Du is the contraction of de + le ... used for masculine objects. For example, instead of "J'ai de le pain" it becomes "J'ai du pain". In contrast, for feminine objects, you don't use a contraction. For example "J'ai de la confiture." does NOT become "J'ai du confiture." Please review her "French Partitive Articles" video here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6edld_vN7VA.html Chaque jour generally means something closer to "each day" ... as if you could potentially count them, even if the number was vast. On the other hand, tous les jours has the sense of *all* the days in an uncounted / uncountable collection, as in "every day". For example "Each day I get up and have a cup of coffee." Since our lives are finite, it's potentially possible to count the number of days I have woken up and drank my cup of coffee. "Every day is the same, the sun rises and sets, the stars shine and the universe goes on." While, yes, the universe will eventually die, the number of days is so vast that it is essentially endless.
It depends on the context I did it anyway : je l'ai *quand même* fait We can't change it anyway : on ne peut pas le changer *de toute façon* Anyway, let's move on : *bref* or *peu importe* , passons à autre chose
It's mostly a matter of formality. Generally, you'll use "vous" to address someone you don't know very well, and "tu/te" with a good friend. There are some more nuances to them, but that's the broad scope of "tu" versus "vous."
J'en voudrais # is acceptable too When it is already established what it is you're buying # is any number you go with J'en voudrais 8 = I would like 8 of them.
Ma'am Alexa, You didn't translate all the French sentences in English while explaining.Had you done that,it would have been better to understand them properly !