French, 25.12.2019 04:31 Cutiepie55561
Sometimes you can miss the meaning of a sentence even when you understand all of the words in that sentence. expressions like these area called idiomatic expressions or idioms.
for example, in english people say "he kicked the bucket." this does not mean that someone litererally kicked a bucket with their foot. it is a culturally-tied expression meaning "he died." there are many expressions like this in french, and they require a little bit of cultural or contextual understanding to use or comprehend.
you have learned about french proverbs earlier in the week.
now do an internet search for more french idioms, and write down 2 of your favorites. teach a family member to say them, and them understand what they mean.
in the box provided below, write the two idioms you learned in french, and what they really mean in english. (10 points per idiom = 20 points)
Answers: 3
French, 26.06.2019 05:00
In this sentence should the 'de' be 'du'? "non, je ne fais pas de sport."
Answers: 2
French, 28.06.2019 07:30
Conjugate the verb "aller" in the 1st person of the singular in the future proche question 2 options: je vais aller vous vais aller nous allons aller ils vont aller question 3 (1 point) conjugate the verb "finir" in the 3rd person of the singular in the future proche question 3 options: ils vont finir on va finir elle vont finir il vais finir question 4 (1 point) conjugate the verb "regarder" in the 3rd person of the plural in the future proche question 4 options: ils va regarder il va regarder elles vont regarder je va regarder question 5 (1 point) conjugate the verbe "crier" in the 2nd person of the singular in the future proche question 5 options: je vas crier tu va crier vous allez crier tu vas crier
Answers: 2
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