Lax89
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Merci
You're welcome Thanks for the karma
The Red Carpet Highlights of... The 77th Annual Cannes Film Festival 2024!
Merci
Hi, I wanna ask about "positions"
What do "lying on my back" and "lying on my belly" mean?
"lying on my back"--does it mean a position where your back is facing the subject you're lying on (for example, a bed) with your face facing the ceiling?
"lying on my belly"--is it the position where your belly is facing the subject you're lying on with your back facing upwards?
Thanks!
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What does "dash and drizzle" mean, please?
L'amour d'aimer c'est de s'aimer d'amour,
Donner son corps au plaisir nuits et jours,
Mais chaque fois c'est ta voix que j'entends
Et tu m'appelle Emmanuelle.
From the song Emmanuelle
Could anybody help me understand the first line?
The love of loving is to love each other with love (yeah...)
is there an adjective to describe "latecomer goes above than the others" kind of situation?
I think it means 'I was really serious'(about the complement)
BUT I am not a native speaker so I mightn't be right
German sentence structure can be really complicated
I've started learning French a few days ago. Loving it so far.
I have a couple questions though which weren't explained clearly in my online lessons.
1. At first I thought adjectives always goes before the subject. For example, a red apple - un pomme rouge. However, in the last couple lessons, I've noticed they sometimes say it the other way around, red roses - des rouges roses. Why's that?
2. If I understand correctly, you use du/des when you mean to say some (although, you don't always say some in English in those instances). When you use du/des, you don't use a preposition - le/la/les. But then there was one sentence when they said some water and the French translation was du l'eau. Why's that?