sorry for the error: their books is LEURS livres. Also to clarify the pronunciation, there is no liaison when the "h" is not silent, we say: "une / hache", but there is one when the "h" is silent"une horloge" is something like "u norloge"
WOOOW Merci beaucoup now I understand it better. I was totally lost and tomorrow I have my final exam on French and this is going to come out on the exam. So this was totally helpful =)) Thank you sooo much for this wonderful video. I'm glad that you gave examples at the end so we can practice what we learned. I think that's awesome and soooo helpful =))) I now understand it . =)) But i would have loved if you had given examples of (Your singular) that way we would be able to use Ton, Ta and Tes
A+ content in my book. Clearly and concisely explained. Sometimes a grid chart or a picture can be a much more effective way of conveying information (and it is also a useful quick reference guide). I will admit I panicked a little when I realized certain feminine words follow one set of rules and other feminine words follow a different set of rules. It's a lot to remember, but if I keep working at this the rules will start to feel natural. Merci and salut. ;)
Ok, then I understand that case as a exception, isn't? Thank you by your explanation. And thank you also by your course. I think, that's the best course of french in the web.Congratulations. Bon weekend!
well, you are right, if I say Leur voiture, I mean that there is one car and several owners, but I say leurs voitures, I mean several owners and several cars too (sorry for my previous explanation)
Por fin me quedo claro, gracias por el video puedes hacer otro con los adejetivos demostrativos en frances como: this,that,those y these con varios ejemplos. Y sino fuese mucho pedirte como hacer preguntas en frsnces y responder correctamente; ya que no hay videos que hagan ejrmplos con palabras para ir aumentando el vocabulario ya me suscribi amie a bientot!
j'apprends le francais a l'ecole. il est facile oublier le mots qui sont mas/fem. mais j'adore francais! I am starting to understand the french speakers here in western canada but the quebecois french is very difficult and I actually can;t follow simple conversation. I will wait to learn their slang after I get better at french.
well, H of hache is NOT silent means that we need a pause to pronounce it: ma hache, it is like a false consonant and because of this pause we make no connection between the two words, so ma hache (and not mon nache)
This "pause" is actually a proper consonant, so called "glottal stop", which is the sound that you make when contracting your glottis muscles, as if you were about to cough. As in the English "uh-oh".
@albo181 thank you for your explanation about what we can read on English Grammar Books, however if it is about simplicity I find easier to say that an ADjective is ADded to another word and a pronoun instead of a noun (pro+noun), thank you
@jackturner1993 pronouns are used instead of nouns, "mine" is a pronoun, but "my" is not, "my" alone means nothing, you need a noun with it, so we are talking here about adjectives.
Just started studying french about a week ago and this is the first sentence that I completely understood. Thank you, indirectly you helped me to pursuit my aim of becoming a polyglot. :)
Thank you so much M Pascal!! I have a question about "une hache" to "ma hache" @ 6;02. I thought that if the noun begins with a vowel sound, including silent h, it uses the masculine mon/ton/son. I use this that way most often with mon/son/ton amie. Can you please explain when that rule does not apply? Merci BEAUCOUP :-)
Just a couple of questions. How is livre considered masculine when it should be feminine as it ends with an "e" and what is the exact difference between the ton/ta/tes your and votre/votre/Vos your?
Bonjour Pascal, Compiments for your course, it is really clear and useful. I am wondering how you made the videos? would you liek to share I am trying to chose among options to create a video for Bulgarians who want to tackle some more problematic Business English issues. I would appreciate your help very much!
+shadow king +awesomedude555 +Lara Lalo Shut your traps. It's a legit question. How the fuck do you figure out if a stone is masculine or feminine? Most folks comin' to see this video aren't native French speakers. We "just can't know" if a word is feminine or masculine.
Great explanation! One question I still have though is if it’s a masculine word like ‘chat’ but my actual cat at home is a female cat do I refer to her as ‘mon chat’ or ‘ma chatte’ ?
@@Frenchspanishonline Put the link to it in the description. This way people will find it more easier. Not much of them will be digging through comments to find it.
@@Frenchspanishonline Merci Pascal, and I forgot to thankyou also for your great lessons in French, you kind of take it to the next level for beginners like me, because you expand on the learning I think I already know, only to add exceptions to the rules I have already learnt. At first this is quite frustrating for beginners but then one realises that the exceptions in French grammar and language, are really necessary. Plus, while learning those exceptions that your lessons seem to focus alot on, one becomes even more adept at the language faster and more effectively, than if one just learns Textbook French. So thankyou again for making French learning challenging.
@jackturner1993 As an English teacher, I know that many books refer to "my", "your" etc. as being possessive pronouns, primarily because, for example 'My pen' is used instead of 'Roger's Pen'. Roger is by itself a noun but here it's used as an adjective, so technically we are replacing an adjective not a noun. I feel that 'possessive adjective' more acurately describes what it is, but I know many books and teachers prefer to teach them as pronouns for the sake of simplicity.
sorry for the error: their books is LEURS livres. Also to clarify the pronunciation, there is no liaison when the "h" is not silent, we say: "une / hache", but there is one when the "h" is silent"une horloge" is something like "u norloge"
Jesus wants to save you he died for you
finally I found someone who can teach French in simple way , thank you very much
merci
@@Frenchspanishonline bonjour! Je m'appele Argyn! Merci beaucoup!
I think this is what my Teacher should of explained to us when we did adjectives in class.
Yep
Should have.
Thanks for comparing English to French, so many teachers do not know,English. It is not easy to forget my native language of English rules.
Great video! Straight to the point. Helped me a lot with possessives.
This man is truly awesome! Thank you so much!
Are u still alive rn
@@stealth3625 😂 bruh
WOOOW Merci beaucoup now I understand it better. I was totally lost and tomorrow I have my final exam on French and this is going to come out on the exam. So this was totally helpful =)) Thank you sooo much for this wonderful video. I'm glad that you gave examples at the end so we can practice what we learned. I think that's awesome and soooo helpful =))) I now understand it . =)) But i would have loved if you had given examples of (Your singular) that way we would be able to use Ton, Ta and Tes
I adore your accent! And your videos are going to save my grades by a mile, thank you so much! Je suis reconnaissante
A+ content in my book.
Clearly and concisely explained.
Sometimes a grid chart or a picture can be a much more effective way of conveying information (and it is also a useful quick reference guide).
I will admit I panicked a little when I realized certain feminine words follow one set of rules and other feminine words follow a different set of rules. It's a lot to remember, but if I keep working at this the rules will start to feel natural.
Merci and salut. ;)
@Irina1972able spassiba for this information, you can also follow me on facebook to receive daily French expressions
you should watch the video again, i guess, and be happy!
Thank you! Merci beaucoup! I’m learning French and this lesson is fantastic !😀
Merci
Sorry, possessive pronouns in English are mine, yours... in this video it is about Adjectives in English, my, your etc...
Merci beaucoup pour ton explication.
Do u mean thank you for this explanation?
@@guzzlegamerg1750 thanks a lot for your explanation
Thank you so much I have finally understood, god bless you
This is really valuable I was finding out to learn French like this which can make easy to understand.
Nice explanation .... Straight to the point .... All my doubts cleared for my exam 😃 thanku 🙏
Akshu Infinity génial, merci.
Ok, then I understand that case as a exception, isn't? Thank you by your explanation. And thank you also by your course. I think, that's the best course of french in the web.Congratulations. Bon weekend!
well, you are right, if I say Leur voiture, I mean that there is one car and several owners, but I say leurs voitures, I mean several owners and several cars too (sorry for my previous explanation)
@KidVVill Vous also refer to the singular formal form, so it is singular or plural
@taty3389 thank you, i will think about your advice ;)
Merci beaucoup pour ton explication ❤️ j’aime français et je voudrais un jour ma français être parfait
Super, merci
@yvonnerosenuera thank you, please read the comment about the error I made
Merci........thank you so much.....tmrws my French paper and this video helped me understanding such topic .......😊
merci beaucoup.j`aime the lesson,so straight to the point.
@htcjunkie16 it is, the correction hasalreday been been made on the main website frenchspanishonline and in the comments on youtube, enjoy!
l'explication est très claire! XD Merci
Tom is my test , thank you so much 😊
It is very useful and easy to understand.
cela m'a aidé beaucoup pour mon test! !! merci beaucoupe monsieure ! :)
Excellent and simple explanation.Not even I can not understand my French teacher. I subscribed to your channel.Merci beaucoup!
@Irina1972able Hi, le site sur facebook s'appelle frenchspanishonline
LOVE you explain it in English as well merci beacoup xox
mal. ldnx merci
your video really helped me with my test. THANK YOU! MERCI!
Lol
@Irina1972able thank you but what do you mean?
Por fin me quedo claro, gracias por el video puedes hacer otro con los adejetivos demostrativos en frances como: this,that,those y these con varios ejemplos. Y sino fuese mucho pedirte como hacer preguntas en frsnces y responder correctamente; ya que no hay videos que hagan ejrmplos con palabras para ir aumentando el vocabulario ya me suscribi amie a bientot!
This was very helpful!
thank you so much....its help me for my tomorrow exam....love it!!
This was really helpful with my schoolwork
j'apprends le francais a l'ecole. il est facile oublier le mots qui sont mas/fem. mais j'adore francais! I am starting to understand the french speakers here in western canada but the quebecois french is very difficult and I actually can;t follow simple conversation. I will wait to learn their slang after I get better at french.
and plural informal, plural formal!
well, H of hache is NOT silent means that we need a pause to pronounce it: ma hache, it is like a false consonant and because of this pause we make no connection between the two words, so ma hache (and not mon nache)
This "pause" is actually a proper consonant, so called "glottal stop", which is the sound that you make when contracting your glottis muscles, as if you were about to cough. As in the English "uh-oh".
@ARASHME11 thank you and much more on my website!
Thanks for the video it really helped and I got a A
really? how great!
J'ai comprends-tu monsieur, merci beaucoup
thanks a lot for everything you are teaching us
merci!
@albo181 thank you for your explanation about what we can read on English Grammar Books, however if it is about simplicity I find easier to say that an ADjective is ADded to another word and a pronoun instead of a noun (pro+noun), thank you
Thank you thank you thank you!
merci
Spending a summer in Morocco. Your videos are greatly helped me!
LOL I am originally from Palestine and our Arabic is not mutual intelligible.
Great, morocco is a nice country
well, we say une horloge = u norloge but une hache (no connection) une / hache
Hi I am from 2022 and tomorrow I have a French exam and you make it so easy thank you
@jackturner1993 pronouns are used instead of nouns, "mine" is a pronoun, but "my" is not, "my" alone means nothing, you need a noun with it, so we are talking here about adjectives.
Learn French with Pascal website? I want the to print the table
Merci beaucoup pour votre leçon, c'est utile
Just started studying french about a week ago and this is the first sentence that I completely understood. Thank you, indirectly you helped me to pursuit my aim of becoming a polyglot. :)
This has helped me so much
Tirbhowan Dishti merci
excellent!! Très informatif!! Merci Pascal!👍👍
Clear explanation, thanks. Why is it leur livres and leurs voitures and not leur voitures?
To the point.... Perfect
Merci d'avoir partagé. C'est utile.
Leaf Dragon mercii
I love your video and finally after searching 9weeks I finally got a best video gg
@Irina1972able he he you are right because in French if you don't know it is hard to guess: je vous ai trouvé
Thank you so much M Pascal!! I have a question about "une hache" to "ma hache" @ 6;02. I thought that if the noun begins with a vowel sound, including silent h, it uses the masculine mon/ton/son. I use this that way most often with mon/son/ton amie. Can you please explain when that rule does not apply? Merci BEAUCOUP :-)
tysm you helped me study for my exams
Thank You!
Thank you 🙏 Sir you are helping me for my French exam 😍
Merci
Just a couple of questions. How is livre considered masculine when it should be feminine as it ends with an "e" and what is the exact difference between the ton/ta/tes your and votre/votre/Vos your?
Helped a lot thanks
thanks! these are great videos.
Can you add more videos for French beginner ? Thank you for your video...........!
+ly mano sure, you may find much more for beginners at www.frenchspanishonline.com/beginnersfrench/freefrench.html
Bonjour Pascal, Compiments for your course, it is really clear and useful. I am wondering how you made the videos? would you liek to share I am trying to chose among options to create a video for Bulgarians who want to tackle some more problematic Business English issues. I would appreciate your help very much!
+Petya Koleva well, that one was just made with Powerpoint
you recoded the voice and the movement in the cursor in PPT? I was not aware that this is possible ...
We did it in our school but I didn't understand ,now I understood thanks a lot
Great
but how do you know what words are mas and which words are fem?????
dumbass!
Rich you just do.
Just how do you know if the word is female or male? You just can't know?
+shadow king +awesomedude555 +Lara Lalo Shut your traps. It's a legit question. How the fuck do you figure out if a stone is masculine or feminine? Most folks comin' to see this video aren't native French speakers. We "just can't know" if a word is feminine or masculine.
Sometimes(in my case i've seen it many times) the words ending with an 'e' at the end are feminine words in french, hope that helps.
Thank u for making things simple...helped a lot
Merci
merci beaucoup . je apprendre que tre bien .C'est facile
Kholoud MB "j'apprends" "très" ^-^ have a nice day
nice explain deeply
Je compris bien merci monsieur
Merci beaucoup.
Awesome explanations sir.I was wondering,how to understand. Once again thanks a lot.
Merci
Thank you so much! I love this video,it helped me for my French exam tomorrow! Merci beaucoup! ❤️
wow, super !
j'aime la grammaire francaise-south africa
Mamba lendze Gininda merci
Great explanation! One question I still have though is if it’s a masculine word like ‘chat’ but my actual cat at home is a female cat do I refer to her as ‘mon chat’ or ‘ma chatte’ ?
très bien et merci
n m merci, the new lesson is here: ruclips.net/video/2P6ZwskjeJc/видео.html
@@Frenchspanishonline Put the link to it in the description. This way people will find it more easier. Not much of them will be digging through comments to find it.
8:44 Leur livres (pl) ? It's not leurs livres?
+Schweizer HD He has corrected it in the exercise because, as you pointed out, it IS "leurs livres."
ou ok :)
Hanzo t
can you scroll
thank you soooooooooo much!
lmao are you still alive
Great lesson
شكرا shukran
De rien
Their books - leur livres. Why not leurs? Livres is plural...
Merci!
Hey in the end u had made a slight mistake that at ending exercise for THEIR BOOKS it is LEURS LIVRES not LEUR LIVRES!
Oui
Very interested.
Très bien, merci😊
very good lesson
Thanks for this..
thank uu... this video was a great help....
Now I understand ;-)))
Thanks for lessons very much!)
Merci Beaucoup 😊
De rien
Very clear.
Great explanation, Pascal! Merci beaucoup!
John Cummins de rien
Can you write je/tu/il etc. with I/you/he etc. instead of only writing the English translation, thank you so much this video is really really helpful
bonjour Pascal. The recording volume on your videos is very low. is it possible for you to record your videos at a higher volume please.
Craig Peter DG sure, merci
@@Frenchspanishonline Merci Pascal, and I forgot to thankyou also for your great lessons in French, you kind of take it to the next level for beginners like me, because you expand on the learning I think I already know, only to add exceptions to the rules I have already learnt. At first this is quite frustrating for beginners but then one realises that the exceptions in French grammar and language, are really necessary. Plus, while learning those exceptions that your lessons seem to focus alot on, one becomes even more adept at the language faster and more effectively, than if one just learns Textbook French. So thankyou again for making French learning challenging.
@jackturner1993 As an English teacher, I know that many books refer to "my", "your" etc. as being possessive pronouns, primarily because, for example 'My pen' is used instead of 'Roger's Pen'. Roger is by itself a noun but here it's used as an adjective, so technically we are replacing an adjective not a noun. I feel that 'possessive adjective' more acurately describes what it is, but I know many books and teachers prefer to teach them as pronouns for the sake of simplicity.