Thank you for your message and kind words, @kevinburke7272! Each week we provide a new spoken French lesson to help you improve your modern, every day French. You can receive this lesson straight to your inbox by joining our mailing list here: www.commeunefrancaise.com/youtube-welcome?&source=youtubecom -Lyndsie Comme une Française Team
Si is used when disagreeing with a negatively constructed statement. If someone says, “You don’t have a car.l (“Tu n’as pas de voiture),” but you want to contradict that, you would say, “Yes, I do have one.” (“Si, j’en ai une”.) If you wanted to agree with the original statement, you would say, “Yes, it’s true, I don’t have one,” you would say, “Ouais, c’est vrai, je n’en ai pas.”
@@patwelsh5561 Yes, that's what I was taught at school, but I've noticed when French people are chatting, they tend to use 'si' in more varied circumstances. I'd like a Géraldine-style guide to its formal/informal usage.
I want to translate a large paragraph of English to French but I want the results to be in a format that is line by line ie one Line English and next one in French, is there an app or tool that does this? Thank you
I recently discovered Comme une Francaise, and I really enjoy your videos. Very helpful. Merci!
Thank you for your message and kind words, @kevinburke7272! Each week we provide a new spoken French lesson to help you improve your modern, every day French. You can receive this lesson straight to your inbox by joining our mailing list here: www.commeunefrancaise.com/youtube-welcome?&source=youtubecom
-Lyndsie
Comme une Française Team
Merci Géraldine. J’apprécie vos leçons les samedis. Bien sûr!
Merci, Géraldine. I loved this video!
Merci beaucoup pour enseigner cette nouvelle thème de début de fin de semaine et dimanche
Merci, I need these pronunciation reminders.
Merci Geraldine, C'était une excellente leçon
Merci beaucoup pour le vidéo ✍🏾✍🏾✍🏾
Bonjour et merci!
I found this useful, but please could you also clarify when it is appropriate to use 'si'?
Si is used when disagreeing with a negatively constructed statement. If someone says, “You don’t have a car.l (“Tu n’as pas de voiture),” but you want to contradict that, you would say, “Yes, I do have one.” (“Si, j’en ai une”.) If you wanted to agree with the original statement, you would say, “Yes, it’s true, I don’t have one,” you would say, “Ouais, c’est vrai, je n’en ai pas.”
@@patwelsh5561 Yes, that's what I was taught at school, but I've noticed when French people are chatting, they tend to use 'si' in more varied circumstances. I'd like a Géraldine-style guide to its formal/informal usage.
@@marijo1951 Very interesting. I rarely hear it used, so I’d like to learn more about it too.
I want to translate a large paragraph of English to French but I want the results to be in a format that is line by line ie one Line English and next one in French, is there an app or tool that does this? Thank you
Cela fait tellement longtemps que je n'ai pas vu ta vidéo. Tu es toujours aussi charmante et jolie.
🎉🎉🎉
Promo`SM
This woman is too fast for me, but can I marry her any way?