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- How to ask how often in French? - French Language Stack Exchange
I know how to ask "how many times per [time period]", or "at which frequency", but what is the non-scientific way to ask "how often"?
- What does en train mean? - French Language Stack Exchange
11 I am using Duolingo to learn French at the moment and sometimes it asks me to translate an English phrase into French with multiple options, one using "en train" and one not (often I'm marked as incorrect because I didn't select both options) I don't know how to tell if the "en train" phrase is correct or not
- expressions - How do you say what do you do for work? - French . . .
How do you know what you tried doesn't work ? Give us what you have tried, you'll the fit stackexchange question format and also you'll get a better answer because we'll be able to give you tips on where you go wrong (if you do!) so that you do not repeat your mistakes
- Does voyage souvent make sense? - French Language Stack Exchange
1 I am trying to figure out how to say travel often in French I ran “travel often” through Google translator and got “voyage souvent” But I have two questions Is the translation correct Does that phrase even make sense in French?
- Where did Frenchs silent ending consonants come from?
The abundance of silent ending consonants in French totally separates its pronunciation from the other Romance languages-- neither Spanish, nor Portuguese, nor Italian, nor Latin have that feature
- Where does the idea that French people say oh la la all the time come . . .
Have there been specific elements of French movies, books or any exported culture trivia that made English-speaking people think that "oh la la" is something that French people actually say all the time, or that would explain why this phrase became a stereotype of the French language ?
- Why do French people use “en fait” so often?
Is there any meaning to it besides “actually”? Because I’ve seen it used so so often in informal French and it seems almost like a filler word
- Nom, Prénom, Postnoms relative to US First, Middle, Last name
A prénom, usually short, and often French in origin Given that a person’s full name can be very long, most people use shortened versions of their names, most commonly a combination of either the prénom and the nom, or the nom and one of the postnoms
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