you are simply the best French teacher. thank you, you helped me a lot, my french level is going up because of you and few other french online teachers on the net. thank you all, merci beaucoup a tous.
Yes. In spelling it is complicated, but in speaking it means you can lump things into two groups: "ay" endings; and for vous and nous there is -iez ("ee-yay") and -ions ("ee-yon"). If you can't be bothered with that second group of sounds, then there are the informal forms of address that just use the "ay" endings: 'tu' instead of vous (be careful with that!), and 'on' instead of nous.
@@nataliedacosta2084 Check out the Michel Thomas method if you want something rapid. It's not always the most elegant method, but you'll quickly be able to duct-tape a sentence together and grasp the skeleton outline of the language.
We would teach that you take the nous form of the verb, in the present tense, cross off the 'ons' , to find the stem , ( the exception being être = ét)
please explain about imperatif present(sois, soyons, soyez, aie, ayons, ayez) and Passe........... Those are also difficult to understand......... love you madam Alexa
Alexa, J'apprécie tellement vos leçons !!! Ils sont si clairs et faciles à comprendre !!! Je trouve que mon français progresse tellement et c'est en grande partie grâce à votre enseignement. Merci Beaucoup!!!!! I hope you can understand my French as I am trying to practice by expressing my gratitude to you.
Is it true that the French very often use the "on" form to say "we" rather than "nous"? If so, what are the occasions where you would definitely use "nous"? (C'est vrai que le francais utilise le form "on" pour direr "we" plus souvent que "nous"? Si c'est vrai, quand on certainment utilise le form "nous"?)
Do native speakers often use the imparfait incorrectly, perhaps in place of the passé composé, or without the situation of being interrupted by the passé composé?
I've heard it (I wouldn't say often though)...but every country has people who's comprehension of grammar and vocabulary is not as good as it should be. Go anywhere in the US and you'll hear native English speakers speaking poorly (even though they have at least a high school education).
Bonjou,M allexa ! Et merci beaucoup pour cette védio . Alors j'ai une question ,vous pouvez explique comment utiliser l'imparfait avec le verbe avoir J'ai soif, j'ai faim. ... Je suis malade. ......fatiguer Et le temprateur Il fait froid. ....... Si vous avez le temps, au revoir et à bientôt !
Merci bcp pour tout les leçons. Ils sont très bénéfique ! I am curious however about one thing on this lesson. When a French tutor says 'used to' and explains en français c'est l'imparfait it confuses me sometimes. This is because 'used to' in English is often different from 'I was doing'. 'Used to' often means a habit of doing something regularly and now no longer. And when I use Google Translate to translate 'I used to', I get 'j'avais l'habitude de quelque chose' which is closer to the actual meaning of 'I used to' in English. As such my question is par exemple 'j'avais l'habitude de chanter mais maintenant je le fais pas‘ means 'I used to sing but now I don’t' this is closer to the context of 'used to' in English. Je crois. Whereas l'imparfait in this instance is 'je chantais quand t'es arrivé' which actually means I was singing when you arrived. Which is different imo from 'I used to sing'. Mais comme toujours j'aime bien écouter et regarder son clips sur YT.
Hello ma’am , can you please explain it how to make imperative forme with some sentences like: vous pouvez sortir, nous allons regarder un film, tu es toujours ici, vous allez travaillent maintenant, il faut faire attention!
Sorry madam how to recognize kind of tense. Eg. Tom used to play tennis every Wednesday. Now remove every Wednesday, does imparfait makes sense there? Especially in speaking?
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-WorZ1R6MPO0.html. Le Trio "le detectif blanch" chantent le chanson rigolo: "Le telephone". Ils le chantent en Hebre et francaise.