MISSING INFO IN THIS LESSON: "If a noun is accompanied by two or more adjectives, they are placed after the noun if they are connected by a conjunction such as mais, donc, or, car, et, ou, ni … ni etc." This means that even if the noun is supposed to be placed before, it can be placed after with the use of a conjunction. _______________ I will add a little quiz on my Instagram story in 30 minutes ✅ Join me there: instagram.com/theperfectfrenchwithdylane/ The PDF: theperfectfrench.com/shop/pdf-course-books/the-complete-french-grammar-course-french-beginners-to-advanced/ The paperback: amzn.to/2UYD1fd The eBook: amzn.to/3Dv0RAC
Thank you so much ❤You are the first French teacher I have found that has explained where to place the adjective. I could never understand why some were after and not before the noun/subject.
I was also curious about what is the difference in meaning according to where the adjective was put with cheveux. The best explanation I came across is that it is quite subtle. "des cheveux longs" is more just a literal stating of fact. A neutral observation. Whereas "de longs cheveux " is more subjective and implies an opinion ( either for or against depending on context). ie Dylane a les cheveux longs. Dylane a de beaux longs cheveux. Que pensez vous ?
I agree Mike, thank you. It's definitely subtle. I haven't sent the update yet because there is something missing in this lesson but I can't put my finger on it yet. I am working on it today. You will Hera for me later today, or tomorrow in your case ;)
Bonjour Dylane, another great lesson as usual! However I have a couple of questions to clear up my confusion. If I wanted to say "Look at that big dirty double-decker red bus over there", am I right in thinking that Big would be the only one before and the rest are after in *any* order separated by an "et" ? I'm not sure if I'm just reading into it too much but I always wonder about the order.. Secondly, I'm not sure if they are mistakes in the book or just me not understanding, they are in Exercises 3.7.2 & 3.7.5 I would have thought 3.7.2 was C’est une gentille femme patiente and exercise 3.7.5 was C’est une longue histoire stupide Have I not understood the placement? Merci
Martin I just checked and 3.7.2 is with et: C'est une femme gentille et patiente As of 3.7.5, I think both are fine but I will add the one before and after to the book ;)
Hi Dylane, J'ai deux problèmes sur les solutions d'Ex3.7. No.2: C'est une femme gentille et patiente. No. 5: C'est une historie longue et stupide . (gentille et longue devraient être palcé avant le nom, non?)
I saw the same problems. As well with cheveux longs, I am missing something in this lesson. I am working on it today and I will send an email later. Are you on my maligning list?
J'ai trouvé la pièce manquante à la leçon 🤩 "If a noun is accompanied by two or more adjectives, they are placed after the noun if they are connected by a conjunction such as mais, donc, or, car, et, ou, ni … ni etc." This means that even if the noun is supposed to be placed before, it can be placed after with the use of a conjunction. I will update the lesson in the book, send me an email if you want the updated version :)
“The Last Tuesday” refers to that specific Tuesday as the finale of something. For example the last Tuesday I’ll ever work on again. And last Tuesday refers to a previous Tuesday on the calendar.
Merci infiniment, Dylane!
C'est très clair comme d'habitude !
Merci :)
MISSING INFO IN THIS LESSON:
"If a noun is accompanied by two or more adjectives, they are placed after the noun if they are connected by a conjunction such as mais, donc, or, car, et, ou, ni … ni etc." This means that even if the noun is supposed to be placed before, it can be placed after with the use of a conjunction.
_______________
I will add a little quiz on my Instagram story in 30 minutes ✅ Join me there: instagram.com/theperfectfrenchwithdylane/
The PDF: theperfectfrench.com/shop/pdf-course-books/the-complete-french-grammar-course-french-beginners-to-advanced/
The paperback: amzn.to/2UYD1fd
The eBook: amzn.to/3Dv0RAC
Thank you so much ❤You are the first French teacher I have found that has explained where to place the adjective. I could never understand why some were after and not before the noun/subject.
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks a lot my dear teacher ❤️. I had a problem with that but now it's all clear to me
You are welcome!
This was very helpful 🙏🏻
Merci Stephanie 🤩
Merci beaucoup madame 🌹🌺🌷
De rien :)
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane 🌹🌷🌺
Merci Madame ❤❤❤❤❤
Merci beaucoup
De rien :)
Thanks you explain very clearly
You are welcome :)
Great job !!! 💯💯
Thanks 💯
Very helpful
Glad to hear that
merci
je t'en prie :)
J'ai le fait! Merci....
Bravo David 🙌
Woooo my best friend is here 🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
❤️
I was also curious about what is the difference in meaning according to where the adjective was put with cheveux. The best explanation I came across is that it is quite subtle.
"des cheveux longs" is more just a literal stating of fact. A neutral observation. Whereas "de longs cheveux " is more subjective and implies an opinion ( either for or against depending on context). ie Dylane a les cheveux longs. Dylane a de beaux longs cheveux. Que pensez vous ?
I agree Mike, thank you. It's definitely subtle. I haven't sent the update yet because there is something missing in this lesson but I can't put my finger on it yet. I am working on it today. You will Hera for me later today, or tomorrow in your case ;)
Hi Dylane,
Le grand méchant loup or le méchant grand loup?
What is the formulation for multiple adjective order before a noun?
Merci!
Le grand méchant loup :) I will make a lesson about that :)
Hi Dylane at 8:28, shouldn't it be "Ma" instead of "Mon", in "Mon ancienne voiture" ?
Because ancienne starts with a vowel :)
Thanks Dylane, I can now remember that rule for feminine starting with vowel use mon.
Un pouce en haut, et a demain. Dylane.
Merci Kamel 😃
So...does the adjectives placed before the noun are used in poetic language? (Adjectives with 2 different meanings)
Not really no 😉
Bonjour Dylane, another great lesson as usual! However I have a couple of questions to clear up my confusion. If I wanted to say "Look at that big dirty double-decker red bus over there", am I right in thinking that Big would be the only one before and the rest are after in *any* order separated by an "et" ? I'm not sure if I'm just reading into it too much but I always wonder about the order..
Secondly, I'm not sure if they are mistakes in the book or just me not understanding, they are in Exercises 3.7.2 & 3.7.5
I would have thought 3.7.2 was
C’est une gentille femme patiente
and exercise 3.7.5 was
C’est une longue histoire stupide
Have I not understood the placement?
Merci
Martin I just checked and 3.7.2 is with et: C'est une femme gentille et patiente
As of 3.7.5, I think both are fine but I will add the one before and after to the book ;)
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane Thank you, I thought that because gentille is a "BAGS" word, it would be before the noun
Salut Dylane, i have a question , dernier mardi et mardi dernier, what is their meaning in english, i could not understand it, merci
Mardi dernier is last Tuesday. Le dernier mardi is The last Tuesday :)
Hi Dylane,
J'ai deux problèmes sur les solutions d'Ex3.7.
No.2: C'est une femme gentille et patiente.
No. 5: C'est une historie longue et stupide .
(gentille et longue devraient être palcé avant le nom, non?)
I saw the same problems. As well with cheveux longs, I am missing something in this lesson. I am working on it today and I will send an email later. Are you on my maligning list?
J'ai trouvé la pièce manquante à la leçon 🤩
"If a noun is accompanied by two or more adjectives, they are placed after the noun if they are connected by a conjunction such as mais, donc, or, car, et, ou, ni … ni etc." This means that even if the noun is supposed to be placed before, it can be placed after with the use of a conjunction.
I will update the lesson in the book, send me an email if you want the updated version :)
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane Thanks, Dylane and @hccheng. I had teh same question tonight and this cleared it up.
Jai un question, est-ce plus important en français etre bon en grammaire gold en la communication? (Forgive me for spelling mistakes if there are any)
Un bon niveau de grammaire est important pour écrire et parler. Tout dépend de ce que tu veux faire avec ton français 😉
Hi Dylane🤩
Salut Anu :D
Salut Dylane (french translation )
I dont get it the part on "the last Tuesday" and "Last Tuesday". Whats the difference😅 Can anyone explain to me?
“The Last Tuesday” refers to that specific Tuesday as the finale of something. For example the last Tuesday I’ll ever work on again. And last Tuesday refers to a previous Tuesday on the calendar.
6:30 Avez-vous ?
I did and they are both correct :)
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane Ok, très bien 🌹👍🏻
Im so scary Dylan friday is the back to school can you say something to me 🌷🌷🌷🌷🏆🏆🏆
Don't be scared, everything will be fine 🥰
Je pense que tu as déjà fait des vidéos sur ce sujet 🤔
Oui mais pas dans le cours ;) Je refais les vidéos pour que les sujets se suivent ;)
❤🤩🤩🤩🤩❤
Merci ❤️