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Post by j7oyun55rruk on Jan 6, 2024 13:51:25 GMT 10
I came back at night à He fell asleep at midnight Sun, month, season, year To express in which month something happened or which year the preposition is Avril April éé Summer year An exception is for this please use é I was born In the spring you want to say what day something happened. In English we use propositions but in French you don't need a preposition. I'm going to go on Monday. In French you want to say that something happens repeatedly on a certain day. For example Monday there is still no preposition but you can Add the following in front of the day à I went to see boxing on Friday because and because to C Level Contact List express how long an action lasted can be used Depending on the sentence it can be translated as or as follows I have been studying Hindi for two years I've been living here in Australia since 2008. Be careful to say how long you've been doing something. If you're still doing it now you should use the French present tense rather than the French perfect tense. On the other hand if in the past and the focus of the sentence is the duration of the action the preposition used is I studied piano pendants for two years for a long time however if the emphasis is on duration rather than action this is not required in French While English usually uses é as a preposition, he stayed for two weeks. In this example the focus is on how long he stayed for two weeks. Compare this to the previous example where the action was Action Learn Piano. One exception is when talking about an expected duration in the future. In this case you should use although.
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