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| Discussions | Replies | Latest Activity |
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gêné or embarrasséIt seems the former is used more than the latter. My notes say: I was really embarrassed. J'étais vraiment gêné. an embarrassed… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 8, 2020 Reply by alan gould |
se déplacer v. se rendrei have this example sentence: ils permettent aux employés de se rendre à leur travail can u explain when to use "se rendre" instead of "se… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
0 | May 8, 2020 |
morales v. moeursis there a distinction between them? Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 7, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
le restei would prefer to use "un vestige de" instead of "un reste de" if it's equally common. instead of "accomoder les restes" it would b easi… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 7, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
at first, initiallyare all the following used? in english "a priori" is reserved for only a small % of highly educated: a priori à première vue – at first s… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 7, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
dresseri saw this: des amendes pour non-respect du confinement ont été dressées. i think dresser means to give a fine. so i don't understand i… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 7, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
deadlinei recently saw "date butoir". the dictionary says "délai" or "date limite." Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 7, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
plumerthis means to pluck as in to pluck a chicken. to take advantage of someone is also "plumer." i guess it's slang. what would b the standa… Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 6, 2020 Reply by alan gould |
over timeis one preferable to another -- au fil des ans, au fil des jours, au fil du temps, au fil de temps Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 6, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
farfeluis this just slang? used frequently? Started by alan gould in French Grammar |
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May 6, 2020 Reply by Chantal Savignat |
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