This document discusses agreement in French between nouns and associated words like articles and adjectives. It notes that all French nouns have a gender and that words describing the noun must match its gender and number. It provides an example that adjectives typically add an "-e" for feminine nouns and an "-s" or "-x" for plural nouns to show agreement.
This document discusses agreement in French between nouns and associated words like articles and adjectives. It notes that all French nouns have a gender and that words describing the noun must match its gender and number. It provides an example that adjectives typically add an "-e" for feminine nouns and an "-s" or "-x" for plural nouns to show agreement.
Enseignante de Français pour les classes primaires.
J'ai choisi "Le féminin et le masculin des mots" pour la classe de Eb1 où l'apprenant sera capable de distinguer les mots féminins des masculins.
The document provides instructions for creating "Have you ever..." questions by following a three part structure: 1) Start with "Have you ever", 2) Choose a past tense verb like "played", and 3) Finish with a noun like "baseball". It then provides examples of completed "Have you ever..." questions. The document also outlines a restaurant role playing game where students take turns as the waiter and customer to practice ordering food.
Here is a short guide to negation in French and how to use it.
The use of negation in French is quite straight forward once you know how it works.
There are some examples of how to place negation in a sentence within this presentation.
This document discusses different expressions used to convey preferences, wishes, wants and hopes in English. It outlines the structures for "would like", "would prefer", "prefer", "would rather", "wish", "want", and "hope". For each expression, it provides examples of how they are used with different parts of speech like nouns, verbs, and infinitives. It also distinguishes between uses that refer to past, present or future time frames when expressing wishes or regrets.
The french demonstrative adjectives and pronounsTalk in French
This document provides information on French demonstrative adjectives and pronouns. It begins by defining demonstrative adjectives as words that describe or give further information about a noun, like "this" and "that" in English. It then explains that French uses "ce" and its forms to convey demonstrative adjectives, depending on the noun's gender and number. The document also defines demonstrative pronouns as replacing the noun they refer to, like "this one" in English. It concludes by detailing how French uses "ce", "cela", "ça", "ceci", and the forms of "celui" as demonstrative pronouns, agreeing with the noun's gender and number
Claude Monet's home and gardens in Giverny, France were the subject of many of his late works. Monet purchased the property in 1883 and spent decades cultivating the gardens, which featured lilies, irises, and other plants that would inspire his famous water lily series. Today, the home and gardens have been preserved as the Museum of Impressionisms and welcome over 500,000 visitors each year who come to see the landscape that influenced Monet's iconic impressionist paintings.
This document introduces color adjectives in French and how they change based on the gender of the noun. It notes that in French, colors are used as adjectives after nouns rather than before as in English. For feminine nouns, color adjectives typically add an "e", with exceptions for words ending in "e" and colors derived from fruits. The document provides examples of color agreement rules and prompts the reader to practice using these rules to complete sentences in English and French.
This document contains a series of slides about French clothing vocabulary. It begins with an introductory slide and includes slides on upper body clothing, lower body clothing, feet, hands, head accessories, random clothing items, and underwear. Each slide lists French clothing terms with English translations. The document concludes with slides about the author and resources used.
This document discusses different ways to express preferences, wishes, wants and hopes in English. It outlines constructions using "would like", "would prefer", "prefer", and "would rather" followed by nouns or infinitives to indicate preferences. It also discusses expressing wishes using "wish" plus infinitives or objects, fixed expressions with "wish", and hoping for future or unlikely events using "wish", "if only", and conditionals. Wishes can refer to regrets about the past or desires for present or future situations. The document provides examples to illustrate the use of each structure.
Los adjetivos demostrativos expresan la distancia de un objeto o persona con respecto al hablante. Los adjetivos demostrativos incluyen "este", "ese" y "aquel" para indicar si un objeto está cerca o lejos del hablante.