If you like our videos and would like to support lingoni FRENCH, you are welcome to: - like our videos!! 🥰 - subscribe to our channel!! 🤗 - click on the bell icon to get all our notifications!! 🤩 - leave a comment or a suggestion if you would like us to improve something!! 😇 - and for those of you who need more reading, writing, listening and pronunciation practice, you can check out our app at fr.lingoni.com !! 🤓
I love the look on your face when you explain the irregular verbs and your face says: " The hell if I know why they're conjugated this way.. You want to learn this? Thank God I was taught this at a very young age..." I really love this language though.
"Don't think too much about it," this is basically what i started doing when I'm studying French as my friends had told me this too 😁 like i try to lessen searching for explanation for every grammar lesson, and I find myself learning more. Like, "It's French," is a sufficient explanation and then I move on. Though, I'm still kind of in awe that future simple is very much simpler to conjugate than present simple 😆 This is a crucial lesson! Merci beaucoup !
You are really excellent. These verbs are difficult to conjugate , but when you teach them, they seem to be soft and easy to remember ( they also need a lot of hard work to memorize , 🙂). It seems that the older a verb is, the more irregular it tends to be. because these verbs seem to be the first words that humanbeing' ancestors invented to communicte and share their basic needs and experiences. so their irregularity is quite understandable while they were only orally handed down to successors.
Hi! There is a sentence in the video :- Je fais ce que je veux. Here 'que' stands for 《what》. So why are we adding *ce* before ? Can't it just be Je fais que je veux(I do what I want)?
This is a fixed expression, in Spanish (I'm trying my luck in case you'd speak Spanish haha) it's translated by "lo que" Hago lo que quiero, this "lo que" is the French "ce que".
Hey 👋🏾 really helpful video ❤ my question is why Elle and on(ones) as in the personal or subject pronouns are excluded from the conjugation… is is the same with Il? Merci 🙏🏾
Hi Alicia @lingoni FRENCH, thanks for all the amazing videos. Quick question: at 9:53 you mentioned "Je veux changer de voiture" as " I want to change my car". Would it be improper (non-native like) to say "Je veux changer MA (my) voiture? " Or does 'de' usually follow an infinitive like in this case? Thanks!
Hello Dear and please forgive this very late answer, it looks like I missed this one. Excellent question and actually, Je veux manger ma voiture is not incorrect! It's a perfectly acceptable alternative :) even though the structure changer de ay be more spontaneous for a native! Thanks for your comment and take good care!
Oh. U let me find my mistake -I keep in my mind for two months that “ ils/elles pouvent ”. And today I found it is “ils /elles peuvent”. Hahaha. Merci. I wanna teach u how to say thanks in Chinese ,that is “谢谢” !!!!
Hello Alícia! I have 2 questions. About the verb vouloir (to want) The example you gave was: "Ils veulent partir en vacances." So, if we have the structure to want TO something, this something in french can be a verb in its infinitive form. Therefore, it would be correct if I say: " Je veux aller au cinema." ? Also, about the verb voir (to see) Can I use voir as regarder? Are they the same thing? For example can I say: Je regarde la télé and Je vois la télé. Or does it work like English? I watch the tv but I cannot use "I see" because it doesn't fit. Thank you so much for this class!
OMG such a brilliant lesson, thank you very much Alicia! I will have a question, if you please: You give several examples with the verb "aller": "au cinéma", "à l'école" or "chez le dentiste", which are all translated into English as "TO", meaning "to go TO" - in French this is totally different. Would you please explain if there's a system or a rule to observe each time I'd want to express a direction. Many thanks for everything you do and all the warmest regards from Munich!
*au* is used when referring to a masculine nom (ex: au cinéma; au parc; au travail) *à* is used when referring to a feminine nom (ex: à l'école; à la piscine, à la bulangerie) *chez* , in this case, is used when referring to a profession (ex: chez le dentiste, chez le médecin, chez le docteur)
Quelle est la différence entre les verbes du deuxième et du troisième groupe qui se terminent par (ir). Je veux dire que comment nous pouvons identifier que c'est le verbe du deuxième groupe et celui-ci est le verbe du troisième groupe. bien sûr se terminant par ir. Merci d'avance.
Tu peux les différencier lorsque tu conjugues , avec le "Nous" au présent de l'indicatif. Un verbe du 2ème groupe a une forme en -issons: choisir : Nous choisissons : 2eme groupe mais partir: Nous partons : 3eme groupe.
If you like our videos and would like to support lingoni FRENCH, you are welcome to:
- like our videos!! 🥰
- subscribe to our channel!! 🤗
- click on the bell icon to get all our notifications!! 🤩
- leave a comment or a suggestion if you would like us to improve something!! 😇
- and for those of you who need more reading, writing, listening and pronunciation practice, you can check out our app at fr.lingoni.com !! 🤓
I love the look on your face when you explain the irregular verbs and your face says: " The hell if I know why they're conjugated this way.. You want to learn this? Thank God I was taught this at a very young age..." I really love this language though.
The best teacher I had so far. this lesson was extremely good !
This lesson is perfect example why i love english. 🤣
Cette leçon est très importante pour nous. Merci à vous ❤
Merci. I can't believe there are yet haters, especially for free high quality lessons.
Best teacher ever I’m learning English and French 😊😊😊
"Don't think too much about it," this is basically what i started doing when I'm studying French as my friends had told me this too 😁 like i try to lessen searching for explanation for every grammar lesson, and I find myself learning more. Like, "It's French," is a sufficient explanation and then I move on. Though, I'm still kind of in awe that future simple is very much simpler to conjugate than present simple 😆 This is a crucial lesson! Merci beaucoup !
Merci a toi pour ce commentaire ! :))
Merci madame
They are very important verbs. Thank you!
I love your videos! Keep up the great work and I love your explanations.
Very helpful. Thanks.
Merci beaucoup, Alicia.
thank you SOO MUCH you are the best teacher- ive learned so much from you
Le français est la langue des exceptions , mais je ne vais pas abandonner. Merci prof. Bonne journée.
Oui on peut dire ça mais courage vous allez y arriver ! :)
@@lingoniFRENCH Merci pour votre soutien. Bonne journée.
Merci beaucoup professeure
I love your channel, thank you! ❤️
thank you so much from this video.
You are good at teaching. Thank you for your lessons. It really helps me!
Aie
Best teacher ever ☺
So cool :), thanks a lot!
Alicia, Thank You a lot!!!
Vous êtes le meilleur, merci!
Nice
Very useful.lesson.
C'est ma premiére fois que j'ai regardé ton video. C'est super
merci! cuidado que en francés VIDEO es feminino TA vidéo!
mais bravo et merci pour ton commentaire! ;)
thank you so much
Merci beaucoup 😊 très très bien 😊 madame Alicia
Thanks a lot teacher.
you're very welcome student ! ;)
Merci beaucoup
You are really excellent. These verbs are difficult to conjugate , but when you teach them, they seem to be soft and easy to remember ( they also need a lot of hard work to memorize , 🙂). It seems that the older a verb is, the more irregular it tends to be. because these verbs seem to be the first words that humanbeing' ancestors invented to communicte and share their basic needs and experiences. so their irregularity is quite understandable while they were only orally handed down to successors.
Thank you for this nice compliment!
And you are absolutely right about your explanation, that's what makes the magic of the French language! :)
Formidable......Mam......Merci
Merci beaucoup alicia thanks
Très très bon merci
Fantastic 😘😘
Thanks 🤗
Great❤
Merci beaucoup alicia
Merci!
Hi! There is a sentence in the video :- Je fais ce que je veux.
Here 'que' stands for 《what》. So why are we adding *ce* before ? Can't it just be Je fais que je veux(I do what I want)?
This is a fixed expression, in Spanish (I'm trying my luck in case you'd speak Spanish haha) it's translated by "lo que" Hago lo que quiero, this "lo que" is the French "ce que".
@@lingoniFRENCH D'accord ,Merci beaucoup 😊
Merci pour tout
Hey 👋🏾 really helpful video ❤ my question is why Elle and on(ones) as in the personal or subject pronouns are excluded from the conjugation… is is the same with Il? Merci 🙏🏾
Cette leçon est très efficace.
merci !
Hi Alicia @lingoni FRENCH, thanks for all the amazing videos. Quick question: at 9:53 you mentioned "Je veux changer de voiture" as " I want to change my car". Would it be improper (non-native like) to say "Je veux changer MA (my) voiture? " Or does 'de' usually follow an infinitive like in this case? Thanks!
Hello Dear and please forgive this very late answer, it looks like I missed this one. Excellent question and actually, Je veux manger ma voiture is not incorrect! It's a perfectly acceptable alternative :) even though the structure changer de ay be more spontaneous for a native! Thanks for your comment and take good care!
Love you too
merci 👌
perfect
Oh. U let me find my mistake -I keep in my mind for two months that “ ils/elles pouvent ”. And today I found it is “ils /elles peuvent”. Hahaha. Merci. I wanna teach u how to say thanks in Chinese ,that is “谢谢” !!!!
Hello Alícia! I have 2 questions.
About the verb vouloir (to want)
The example you gave was: "Ils veulent partir en vacances." So, if we have the structure to want TO something, this something in french can be a verb in its infinitive form. Therefore, it would be correct if I say: " Je veux aller au cinema." ?
Also, about the verb voir (to see)
Can I use voir as regarder? Are they the same thing?
For example can I say: Je regarde la télé and Je vois la télé. Or does it work like English? I watch the tv but I cannot use "I see" because it doesn't fit.
Thank you so much for this class!
But teacher, I was watching about the verb avoir is te same?
❤❤❤
Hi Alicia, I have a question about a sentence "Je veux changer de voiture." Why did you use only "de"? What does it mean? I'm confused :(
OMG such a brilliant lesson, thank you very much Alicia!
I will have a question, if you please:
You give several examples with the verb "aller":
"au cinéma", "à l'école" or "chez le dentiste", which are all translated into English as "TO", meaning "to go TO" - in French this is totally different. Would you please explain if there's a system or a rule to observe each time I'd want to express a direction.
Many thanks for everything you do and all the warmest regards from Munich!
*au* is used when referring to a masculine nom (ex: au cinéma; au parc; au travail)
*à* is used when referring to a feminine nom (ex: à l'école; à la piscine, à la bulangerie)
*chez* , in this case, is used when referring to a profession (ex: chez le dentiste, chez le médecin, chez le docteur)
@@vini6699 oh great! Thank you very much!
@@Hirschbergs je t’en prie! 😁
Je prends en train de un cafe (present simple). Is that sentence okay?
do you have some easy way to learnd the 3 group
Patience and practice!
❤
:)
Sorry teacher, but we really want free sheets, for exercise
For us who cnt buy access to the app
Eu costumo dizer que os verbos do 3º grupo são "os verbos da bagunça": cada um tem sua própria conjugação e tá tudo bem!
hahahahaha
Quelle est la différence entre les verbes du deuxième et du troisième groupe qui se terminent par (ir). Je veux dire que comment nous pouvons identifier que c'est le verbe du deuxième groupe et celui-ci est le verbe du troisième groupe. bien sûr se terminant par ir.
Merci d'avance.
Tu peux les différencier lorsque tu conjugues , avec le "Nous" au présent de l'indicatif.
Un verbe du 2ème groupe a une forme en -issons:
choisir : Nous choisissons : 2eme groupe
mais
partir: Nous partons : 3eme groupe.
@@lingoniFRENCH
Ok, mais comment je peux savoir que c'est le deuxième groupe et c'est le troisième groupe qui se terminant par ir?
I love you ,!what can help me
❤❤❣
Verbs covered in the video
Aller
Dire
Faire
Prendre
Venir
Voir
Boire
Vouloir
Pouvoir
Savoir
Are you actually pronouncing " r" first in last three word????
How about the verb avoir? How to conjugate this?
Thank you so much
Merci beaucoup
Merci beaucoup alicia
❤
Merci beaucoup alicia