C'est vraiment Bizarre - j'étais sur le point de chercher sur votre chaîne pour savoir si vous aviez une vidéo sur justement ce sujet !!! Comme d'habitude, vous avez rendu une chose compliquée claire et facile à comprendre et à retenir. Merci !!
Once again Dylane, you are so amazing, I can't thank you enough. You are my go to person every time I want to review anything, and you always always solve/clarify all my doubts. Thank you. This video is a gem
love ur videos. i bought ur book and working with it everyday . it has improved my french pronunciation a lot and very quickly . i am very surprised at how quickly i progressed after being stuck for years
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane your course is helping me tremendously . ur teaching style is so very empathetic n calming . u should teach "how to teach"
Thank you kindly for this. In future videos, it would be wonderful if you could let us know how serious a mistake certain errors would (or would not) be. I imagine that, like in English, not all errors are equally serious in terms of everyday communication. Merci beaucoup!
Nice one,one of the finest teachers a student would love to be taught to.If there was any award to be given it would go to you 🙏.I wish Merry Christmas and a Happy New year.
Thank you for this lesson. I have always had issues with this. I will watch this again and share it to my group "French Maine, USA" I welcome you to join the group.
Sometimes « tout » drove me crazy. I wrote « Vous tout jetez le choses par la fênetre » but the right one was « jetez tout »😢 so I came to see about it and you have a video about tout already! I appreciate to you for making all these videos. Thank you😊
Henrik that's a great question! It's just a matter of translation in this case. While you say in English, Hello everyone, we say: Hello to all. Therefore it's a pronoun and we pronounce the S :)
Is this video referred to in your complete grammar book? I was trying to look up tout - adverb in the book and could not find it. After looking on youtube I found an old video and then of course this one! Super good as always.
"is there ever a time when you pronounce the 's' in tous AND it's followed by "les"?", no, unless LES is in another sentence following or after a coma, but not directly. "and when do you say "tout les " or "tous les " ?" tous les is the correct one :)
Merci beaucoup de l’explication, Dylane. C’est un concept très difficile chez les étrangers, y comprend moi! Est-ce qu’il y a un quiz qui me permettrait de perfectionner ma connaissance du concept ‘tout’? Pourriez-vous m’en conseiller, s’il vous plaît?
thank you so much for the video, it is very nice to have a channel that explains the grammar in exact details and so descriptively. However, i still have a small doubt: shouldn't we use liasons when we use tout in plural pronoun form of the tous and toutes? as in- tous les participants ont reçu un prix.--> tous |z|ont reçu un prix.
Thanks a lot for this informative video! One question here: when we change tous in /tous mes amis / into pronoun , the sentence is transformed into /Je les so tous alleles./
Hi Dylane, when tout etc is used to say very, when would you use tres rather than tout. Il est tout petit vs il est tres petit. Thanks in advance, Mike
Usually TOUT is more formal, however, if you use it to talk about something cute, tout can be used anytime - il est tout petit, il est tout mignon, etc. Otherwise just keep it for a more formal use :)
Bonjour Dylane! Faut-il faire la liason avec le PRONOM " TOUTES" dans les phrases suivantes : 1.elles sont touteS_hEureuses. 2.elles sont touteS_Arrivées. Merci d'avance.
Have you covered the pronunciation of the words Tu and Tous? I was in Lyons last year and wanted to tell the waiter "Toute e'tait delicieux" but it came out "You were delicious." Any advice on this one, Dylane?
teacher I have a question. In "Elle ne m'a pas tout dit." is the "tout" here a noun or a adverb? and can you also say "Elle ne m'a pas dit tout."? merci!
MERCI DYLANE!!!! Si j'utilise la phrase " elles sont toutes contentes" je pense que "toutes" peut se traduire de deux manières : 1) vraiment 2) toutes сes femmes..... J'ai raison? Merci d'avance
I have no doubts now, that French people have most developed ears to listen all these finest sounds. Meanwhile I have to develop some extra brain cells to learn all these linguistic rules. 😩
Don’t worry about it: I’m a native French speaker, I went to primary school, high school, college and now university all in French, i’ve been reading and writing in French for nearly 30 years…. I still struggle with grammar. I would say around 95% of native French speakers struggle to some extent with French grammar (I’m just now realizing that’s probably why we all write our emails in English… English grammar is so easy!) My bugaboos are leur/leurs and this tous/tout/toutes/toute… on top of that “leurre” means “bait,” “l’heure” means “the hour” and “toux”/“tousse” means “cough” but it’s pronounced the same as the other leur and tout/tous… as in “ce sont leurs leurres que tu vas prendre tout à l’heure?” (Will you be using their baits at a later hour) or “tu tousses tout le temps sur tous tes toutous” (you cough all the time on all your stuffed animals)… Don’t get me started on ton/tons/tond/t’ont/tonton/-t-on/tonds or c’est/ces/ses/sait/sais/s’est….(like “il sait” and “il s’est” are pronounced exactly the same but one means “he’s” in the passive verb tense and the other “he knows”)…. we see homophones in the first grade but we’re still confused by the time we reach the PhD!