In French, the interrogative adjectives quel, quelle, quels, quelles mean “which?” or “what?”. They must agree in number and gender with the nouns they modify. The French interrogative pronouns lequel, laquelle, lesquels and lesquelles mean “which one?” and “which ones?”. This page will cover both French interrogative adjectives and pronouns in detail. French Interrogative Adjectives …
Stressed pronouns, also called disjunctive or emphatic pronouns, are used to provide emphasis of a personal pronoun that refers to a person or group of people. The French stressed pronouns are: moi (me), toi (you), lui (him), elle (her), nous (us), vous (you), eux (them) and elles (them). French stressed (disjunctive) pronouns Stressed pronoun chart …
In French, there are two ways of saying “it is”, “he is” and “she is”: C’est and il est and elle est. Mastering c’est vs. il est can be very challenging. Read down this page and you’ll never get confused again! C’est vs. il est C’est vs il est: underlying rule The underlying rule is …
One of the most difficult aspects of learning French is learn the gender rules for nouns. All French nouns have a gender (masculine or feminine) and take the direct articles le and la or indirect articles un and une. The goal of this page is to help students master the gender of French nouns. Guide …
One of the more difficult aspects to learning French is trying to remember which verbs are followed by the preposition à and which ones are followed by the preposition de. Rather than trying to memorize all of the verbs followed by de, here’s a list of the top-10 most commonly used verbs with sample phrases. …