Learn french, French language, French vocabulary, alphabet, pronounciation, spelling, European Union, France
Have you ever dreamt about a super desperate situation? Like, you can't run, you're trapped in a speeding car, or you just landed in a french speaking country, and your only french speaker friend is gone missing, you're on your own. All you remember is "oui oui, ca va", you're not going to get far. Given that over 65% of the French population does not speak a second language frequently, maybe you should learn french to avoid relying on others. There's many benefits about speaking french.
[...] “Est-ce que tu peux me passer le Can you pass me the salt ? Section Vocabulary and verbs Bottom of Form Lecture Family vocabulary Now is time to fill your head with basic but useful vocabulary. First, we'll complete what we already know with vocabulary about jobs and family. Let's start with the family, I will provide the gender of every word, don't forget to study the gender too. If the gender is feminine, use when talking about a family member. [...]
[...] Depending on your accent, the letter sounds similar. is pretty similar in both languages, except our is a little shorter. Fun fact: This letter is used to shorten the word pronounced the same way, which means is a really hard sound. The English as we learn it sounds more like a You'll have to pull the Spanish out of you to pronounce this right, but do not roll your tongue, the sound of the is right in the middle. The in French literally means “double in English, you pronounce it like “double We looked at the letter and said, it' two letters put next to each other, so double The letter is pronounced grec” which means “greek In Dutch, it's pronounced Upsilon. [...]
[...] You can only add a city. Example : travaille a Miami”. It's meant to designate your work location, not the name of your company. You can't say travaille a Facebook“, that's incorrect. travaille chez“ is the sentence you should use to tell someone who you work for. Example : travaille chez Facebook“ or travaille chez Nintendo“ suis en vacances“, that means you're on holiday, don't say that when someone asks you about your job, that's rude. suis de/je viens is used to tell the other person where you're from. [...]
[...] You can change the speed of the video on the bottom of the screen. Get ready The first dialogue will be about a problem at the airport and the second one will happen at the restaurant. Lecture Dialogue at the airport A Bonjour, je suis Laura. B Bonjour, je suis Damien A Je cherche le guichet des objets perdus. B Vous etes aux objets perdus. Est-ce que vous avez perdu un objet ? A J'ai perdu ma veste. B Okay, je vais chercher votre veste, un instant s'il vous plait. [...]
[...] That's a whole lot of new countries you'd feel comfortable in while travelling One day, if you worked hard enough and are able to speak on a good level, you might even be able to understand old French poetry, and that is a great reward, trust me I hope this course will give you motivation to learn more every day and travel to discover more places Lecture Who am My name is Emilie, I often write it the English way. I was born in Brussels, Belgium. I currently live in the south of Belgium, in a city between Brussels and the French border. Most of my close family members are French and English speakers. [...]
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