Thank you for your videos. I used to leave near Paris and now I try to settle in Chalon sur Saône. It's hard because people are not very interested in learning foreign languages. I rely on the Internet to speak English and Spanish. You are a breath of fresh air.
Svp j'attends avec impatience les "GET" "PUT" and "TAKE" car entre descendre d'un bus ou descendre les escaliers il y a une différence et je comprends plus rien je mélange tout. Toutes les personnes lisant ce commentaire peuvent mettre un "j'aime" car ces 3 verbes sont sûrement les plus utiles....
Merci pour la suggestion et à ceux qui ont liké pour lui donner du poids ! Je prends bonne note :) Par contre concernant GET il y a déjà deux vidéos à ce sujet. Elles ne couvrent pas tout mais l'essentiel est là je pense: 6 manières d'utiliser GET (on ne parle pas des phrasal verbs dans celle-ci: th-cam.com/video/K-LeCfspOWo/w-d-xo.html) Et 12 phrasal verbs formés avec GET: th-cam.com/video/eflpfrbWLxk/w-d-xo.html A bientôt!
Settle down at home I've currently and attentively watched this usefull lesson to settle me in my second language. Please let fix my expression if need be. Thanks a lot!
Voici une suggestion : I settled home and looked carefully at this useful lesson to learn my second language. Please correct my expression if necessary.
Merci pour tes vidéos !chacune me motive de plus en plus a m'ameliorer en anglais En fait pourrais-tu faire une vidéo sur des expressions américaines? Bonne continuation ;)
Merci ! Je prends note ! On avait déjà fait un vidéo sur 1 différence entre l'anglais US et British... Pas exactement ce que tu demandes mais ça peut tout de même t'intéresser en attendant ;) th-cam.com/video/uh0Yl8_bs-M/w-d-xo.html
Hi! I guess your last sentence is a question so I'm gonna try to be the most specific I could to explain it. So the active form in English (or in French) can be easily identified, for example : "The cat is eating the mouse". In this sentence, the subject is "The cat" the verb is "to be + ing verb" and "the mouse" is a complement. Thanks to these elements we can identify the sentence as an active form because we only have "to be" conjugated. To explain the passive form, let's take the same sentence : "The cat is eating the mouse" so this is active form that we can turn into a passive one and to manage to do that we have to change the main verb (eat, in this case (by main verb I mean the one who allow us to think about what the cat is doing)) into his past participle form. Past participle is in French : "mangé". And in English, for an irregular verb it would be, for example : eaten or been or (travelled -> you just add a "ed" at the end of your verb if it's a regular verb) Plus, with the passive form, the subject in the active phrase is going to be the complement and the complement in the active phrase, the subject. So, here is the passive form : "The mouse (now subject, old complement) is being eaten (we keep the Ing verb form and we add the past participle of "eat") by the cat (now complement, old subject). "By"means "par" in French. Finally, in French for the active form we have : "le chat mange la Souris" -> "The cat is eating the mouse. And the passive form : "La Souris est mangé par le chat" -> "The mouse is being eaten by the cat". If you wanna keep in mind : "by the cat" is called "complément d'agent" en Français. The active form just needs one "main verb", not necessarily "to be" And the passive form needs "to be" + the past participle of your "main verb". Also, don't forget that the subject will become the complement and the complement the subject if you have to put an active phrase into a passive one. Last example, just to make sure : "Maxence wore my shoes yesterday therefore they smell not good" -> active form because we only have the verb "to wear" (au prétérit : wear ; wore ; worn) Into passive form : "My shoes (now subject) were (to be qui est obligatoire et qui garde le même temps que la phrase active : ici le prétérit) worn (past participle) by Maxence yesterday therefore they smell not good." Hope your brain is not about to collapse 🙂 best of luck!
Yeah! I learnt new verbs. I hate the phrasal verbs! Why don’t you indicate the "real" verb : I suppose there is another way to mean "settle up" or "settle down", n'est il pas? 220523 glé
Toujours du plaisir à revoir vos cours Ben 👍🙂
Thank you for your videos. I used to leave near Paris and now I try to settle in Chalon sur Saône. It's hard because people are not very interested in learning foreign languages. I rely on the Internet to speak English and Spanish. You are a breath of fresh air.
Thanks so much Charlotte! These kinds of comments are really important to me, they keep me going!
I used to LIVE...
Encore un grand merci pour ces cours sur les Phrasal Verbs :) et très bonne nouvelle pour la formation sur l'espace membres !
Avec plaisir !
Oui je pense que cette nouvelle formation sera bien utile !
A+
Alban
Svp j'attends avec impatience les "GET" "PUT" and "TAKE" car entre descendre d'un bus ou descendre les escaliers il y a une différence et je comprends plus rien je mélange tout. Toutes les personnes lisant ce commentaire peuvent mettre un "j'aime" car ces 3 verbes sont sûrement les plus utiles....
Merci pour la suggestion et à ceux qui ont liké pour lui donner du poids ! Je prends bonne note :)
Par contre concernant GET il y a déjà deux vidéos à ce sujet. Elles ne couvrent pas tout mais l'essentiel est là je pense:
6 manières d'utiliser GET (on ne parle pas des phrasal verbs dans celle-ci: th-cam.com/video/K-LeCfspOWo/w-d-xo.html)
Et
12 phrasal verbs formés avec GET: th-cam.com/video/eflpfrbWLxk/w-d-xo.html
A bientôt!
merci, simple court et bien expliqué, merci!
MERCI
Settle down at home I've currently and attentively watched this usefull lesson to settle me in my second language. Please let fix my expression if need be.
Thanks a lot!
Voici une suggestion :
I settled home and looked carefully at this useful lesson to learn my second language. Please correct my expression if necessary.
Très interesting
Thank you sir for your help but need to know how to use once
Very Nice
Bonjour juste une question, peut on dire à la place de settle in ..it takes time to get used a new house ?..merci😮
Merci pour tes vidéos !chacune me motive de plus en plus a m'ameliorer en anglais
En fait pourrais-tu faire une vidéo sur des expressions américaines? Bonne continuation ;)
Merci ! Je prends note ! On avait déjà fait un vidéo sur 1 différence entre l'anglais US et British... Pas exactement ce que tu demandes mais ça peut tout de même t'intéresser en attendant ;) th-cam.com/video/uh0Yl8_bs-M/w-d-xo.html
Top !
merci thank you very much, please How use active and passive form ( thank you very much)
Hi! I guess your last sentence is a question so I'm gonna try to be the most specific I could to explain it. So the active form in English (or in French) can be easily identified, for example : "The cat is eating the mouse". In this sentence, the subject is "The cat" the verb is "to be + ing verb" and "the mouse" is a complement. Thanks to these elements we can identify the sentence as an active form because we only have "to be" conjugated.
To explain the passive form, let's take the same sentence : "The cat is eating the mouse" so this is active form that we can turn into a passive one and to manage to do that we have to change the main verb (eat, in this case (by main verb I mean the one who allow us to think about what the cat is doing)) into his past participle form.
Past participle is in French : "mangé". And in English, for an irregular verb it would be, for example : eaten or been or (travelled -> you just add a "ed" at the end of your verb if it's a regular verb)
Plus, with the passive form, the subject in the active phrase is going to be the complement and the complement in the active phrase, the subject.
So, here is the passive form : "The mouse (now subject, old complement) is being eaten (we keep the Ing verb form and we add the past participle of "eat") by the cat (now complement, old subject).
"By"means "par" in French.
Finally, in French for the active form we have : "le chat mange la Souris" -> "The cat is eating the mouse. And the passive form : "La Souris est mangé par le chat" -> "The mouse is being eaten by the cat".
If you wanna keep in mind : "by the cat" is called "complément d'agent" en Français.
The active form just needs one "main verb", not necessarily "to be"
And the passive form needs "to be" + the past participle of your "main verb". Also, don't forget that the subject will become the complement and the complement the subject if you have to put an active phrase into a passive one.
Last example, just to make sure : "Maxence wore my shoes yesterday therefore they smell not good" -> active form because we only have the verb "to wear" (au prétérit : wear ; wore ; worn)
Into passive form : "My shoes (now subject) were (to be qui est obligatoire et qui garde le même temps que la phrase active : ici le prétérit) worn (past participle) by Maxence yesterday therefore they smell not good."
Hope your brain is not about to collapse 🙂 best of luck!
I'd like Settle the work
My brother and his wife want together and Settle down
Yeah! I learnt new verbs.
I hate the phrasal verbs!
Why don’t you indicate the "real" verb : I suppose there is another way to mean "settle up" or "settle down", n'est il pas?
220523 glé
first