Imparfait vs Passé Composé in FrenchQuick View
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Imparfait vs Passé Composé in French

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Not that simple! Following the rule is easy, unfortunately we have in French, many other cases coming with subtleties. That the reason why most of the exercises you can find online are wrong. In many cases you can use both imparfait or passé composé, depending on the context and what you want to say! An example I saw online: Tous les jours, je les ... (aider) à se préparer. And they ask for just one answer. But here both tense are correct! Tous les jours, je les ai aidés à se préparer Tous les jours, je les aidais à se préparer The difference is that the imparfait put the action in a more distant past: La semaine dernière, tous les jours, je les ai aidés... Quand j'était petit, tous les jours je les aidais à... And that a difficulty! On my website you will find more examples for a better understanding: http://www.frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/passe-compose-vs-imparfait/
French Indefinite ArticlesQuick View
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French Indefinite Articles

(1)
In English, we have A and An, in French we have 3 forms, un, une, des for plural. Depending on the gender of the following word and whether it is singular or plural. They also mean ONE. http://www.frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/indefinite-articles-in-french/
How to say THIS and THAT in FrenchQuick View
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How to say THIS and THAT in French

(3)
How to say this, that, these, those in French, we have four words: ce, cet, cette, ces. In this lesson you will know how to use them exactly in French http://www.frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/how-to-say-this-and-that-in-french/
Irregular Plural in FrenchQuick View
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Irregular Plural in French

(2)
A picture about the irregular plural of French words, nouns or adjectives, the lessons is here: http://www.frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/french-irregular-plurals/