Brun vs marron

🌰 Marron = brown (like the color of a chestnut) ✅ Used for: Objects and most things in general une table marron des chaussures marron un sac marron ✅ It’s invariable — it doesn’t change in gender or number! un pantalon marron des jupes marron (not marronnes) 🧔 Brun = brown (more like brown hair / dark features) ✅ Mainly used for: Hair color People (especially referring to someone with dark hair or features) Elle a les cheveux bruns....

avril 9, 2025 · aaron

Genre

🧠 Base meaning of genre: Originally, genre means: noun: type, kind, category Quel genre de musique tu aimes ? What kind of music do you like? But in spoken French, especially among younger people or in informal settings, it has evolved a lot 👇 🔥 Casual Uses of genre in Spoken French 1. Filler word / Discourse marker — like “like” in English C’était, genre, trop bizarre. ➡️ It was, like, super weird....

avril 8, 2025 · aaron

100 Ma patrie, c'est la langue française

Grammar Breakdown of des centaines de millions de gen 1️⃣ Structure Analysis “des” → Indefinite article (plural of de + les), meaning “some.” “centaines” → Noun, meaning “hundreds.” It is the plural of centaine (“a hundred”). “de” → Preposition meaning “of,” used after quantities. “millions” → Noun, meaning “millions.” “de” → Again, preposition meaning “of.” “gens” → Plural noun meaning “people.” 2️⃣ Explanation of Quantity Rules A) “centaines de millions” (Hundreds of millions) Centaine and million are nouns (not numbers in this case)....

mars 16, 2025 · aaron

99 Quoi de neuf

Passons The French word “passons” comes from the verb “passer” and is the first-person plural (nous) form in the present tense or the imperative mood. Possible Meanings: Indicative Present (Nous passons) “We pass” / “We are passing” Example: Nous passons devant l’école tous les jours. (We pass by the school every day.) Imperative (Command: Passons !) “Let’s move on” / “Let’s skip” / “Let’s pass” Example: Passons au sujet suivant....

mars 16, 2025 · aaron

98 Tu as l'air complètement KO

Past Conditional vs. Pluperfect & How They Work Together Both the past conditional (conditionnel passé) and the pluperfect (plus-que-parfait) are used to talk about past events, but they serve different purposes. 1. Pluperfect (Plus-que-parfait) Usage: The pluperfect is used to describe an action that happened before another past event. It provides background information or a cause in the past. Formation: Imperfect of “avoir” or “être” + past participle ✅ Examples:...

mars 15, 2025 · aaron