I live in America and I took 3 years de français in high school and, for 1 1/2 yrs, I learnt only the basics (the, aphabet, tha pronounciation, etc). Let me tell you, that was the most lonely I felt in a classroom. The teacher picked favorites and left us out everyday and it hurt. Maintenant, j'utilise une dictionnaire et YT and Im taking my time. French is very close to my heart and I strive to be fluent one day. Long story short: I am thanking you for this video and wish you well.
Bonjour Clair. J'aime bien cette vidéo. Ça m'aide beaucoup. I am an eternal French language beginner. Due to no immersion at all. I need tons and tons of Spoken French Sentences, preferably in situations or categories. I can use those sentences to practice my speech. I will read them aloud as if speaking. I hope this will help with hearing the Spoken French language.
One thing i learned in English language is about intonation, e.g. in ' i am cooking tonignt' if the 'i' is spoken with stress then in french it will be the sentence you told in your first example. But i have a question: that if other words were stressed, how would it be said in french? Like how would these sentences be constructed: 1- i 'AM' cooking tonight 2- i am 'COOKING' tonight 3- i am cooking 'TONIGHT'
This is enormously helpful! I notice that when French people speak English, they tend to use these sentence structures. I still understand them completely and frankly I find these types of "Franglish" to be rather charming! Do the French see our butchered French the same way? I wait your response since today! (LOL)
I just add time indexs for chapter endings, with all example sentences for the chapters. See my other comment for this index. One can either hand copy the sentences, take a screenshot. Or do like I do. I index to a chapter end. I use another phone and Google Translate to take a photo of the screen. Select Original text. I use my finger to select all the relevant text and copy it. I then paste the saved text to a text file. I use ColorNotes app to save text data.
A page of sentences at a time: C'est ... qui ... 2:16 Depuis / Ça fait ... que 4:09 En + Verb in ANT. 5:16 What you do and How. 6:57 The magic word CHEZ 8:27
Really interesting and useful again. I noticed that in "C'est elle qui me l'a dit" there was no liaison in "C'est elle". Would it be wrong to use a liaison there?
i dont understand the vocabulary used in the video. are there more basic videos on sentence structure i can watch? its been 10 days since i started learning french from scratch - no knowledge of french.
I live in America and I took 3 years de français in high school and, for 1 1/2 yrs, I learnt only the basics (the, aphabet, tha pronounciation, etc). Let me tell you, that was the most lonely I felt in a classroom. The teacher picked favorites and left us out everyday and it hurt. Maintenant, j'utilise une dictionnaire et YT and Im taking my time. French is very close to my heart and I strive to be fluent one day. Long story short: I am thanking you for this video and wish you well.
I am so glad you didn't let your negative school experience affect your willingness to learn!
Enroll in conversational lessons like Preply.
It is so nice to learn from someone who knows both language so well. Thank you for your lessons.
Bonjour Clair.
J'aime bien cette vidéo. Ça m'aide beaucoup.
I am an eternal French language beginner. Due to no immersion at all.
I need tons and tons of Spoken French Sentences, preferably in situations or categories.
I can use those sentences to practice my speech. I will read them aloud as if speaking.
I hope this will help with hearing the Spoken French language.
Merci énormément !! pourriez vous nous présenter plus sur les structures !!
@@yuikomori-qx7ci plus de structures, ou plus d'exemples ?
@@ClearlyFrench de structures
@@yuikomori-qx7ci il y en a beaucoup dans ma méthode "Parlez Français" (dans la description).
@@ClearlyFrench merci ♥️
J’etudie francais depuis trois ans et maintenant je le comprends 😊 merci
Bravo - maintenant il faut utiliser ces phrases dans la conversation de tous les jours 😁
One thing i learned in English language is about intonation, e.g. in ' i am cooking tonignt' if the 'i' is spoken with stress then in french it will be the sentence you told in your first example.
But i have a question: that if other words were stressed, how would it be said in french?
Like how would these sentences be constructed:
1- i 'AM' cooking tonight
2- i am 'COOKING' tonight
3- i am cooking 'TONIGHT'
This is how i would say it:
1. Still the same "c'est MOI qui cuisine ce soir"
2. Je CUISINE ce soir
3. Je cuisine CE SOIR
@@ClearlyFrench
Thank you very much,
Highly appreciate your reply
this lesson is a life savor. A beginner like me can understand clearly. C'est ta vidéo qui est la meilleure. Merci beaucoup
@@datpham2482 i am so glad you found it useful 🙂
This is enormously helpful! I notice that when French people speak English, they tend to use these sentence structures. I still understand them completely and frankly I find these types of "Franglish" to be rather charming! Do the French see our butchered French the same way? I wait your response since today! (LOL)
Yes, most of us do 😊
Une vidéo très utile, j'ai certainement appris une chose ou deux dans celle-ci. Merci Claire.
Je suis contente que ca te plaise !
I just add time indexs for chapter endings, with all example sentences for the chapters.
See my other comment for this index.
One can either hand copy the sentences, take a screenshot.
Or do like I do. I index to a chapter end. I use another phone and Google Translate to take a photo of the screen. Select Original text. I use my finger to select all the relevant text and copy it.
I then paste the saved text to a text file. I use ColorNotes app to save text data.
Merci Claire. J'ai regardé ce vidéo après plusieurs mois (9) et je dois dire que j'avais oublié certaines structures.
C'est bien ce que je pensais 🙂
This was helpful for my summer revision. Thank you for the thorough explanation.
C'est très utile pour nous,les débutants ,continuez ainsi
your the best teacher waaaay better then my sir..
thanks for sharing your experience..
Absolutely great. As always very clear and succinct.
A page of sentences at a time:
C'est ... qui ... 2:16
Depuis / Ça fait ... que 4:09
En + Verb in ANT. 5:16
What you do and How. 6:57
The magic word CHEZ 8:27
Your lessons are so helpful. Merci
Really interesting and useful again.
I noticed that in "C'est elle qui me l'a dit" there was no liaison in "C'est elle". Would it be wrong to use a liaison there?
@@clivebennett8103 no, it's correct, it's better to link, it's just that i don't do the "optional" liaisons when i speak slowly.
Ok, thanks for clarifying.
Merci infiniment ...s'il vous plait donnez moi plus structures
Have a look at this video th-cam.com/video/NT8UR1Svvlo/w-d-xo.html
I love 'chez'; It's just so neat ... 🙏💖
It is, isn't it?
Quelle vidéo constructive ! !
Quant à moi, j' ai bcp aimé et apprécié votre soutien....
🐓 💐 🐓 💐 🐓
Bonne continuation sur internet.
"Ils sont partis en Espagne en voiture". How do I know if this is, 'they drove to spain', versus 'they left spain by car'?
Because EN means to.
Amazing keep it up..
i dont understand the vocabulary used in the video. are there more basic videos on sentence structure i can watch? its been 10 days since i started learning french from scratch - no knowledge of french.
This is too advanced for you. Start with basic lessons like this one: th-cam.com/video/WRUXCXrR6Pw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=RbN1et-Do814Wp0i
@@ClearlyFrench merci beaucoup!
are we supposed to memorize which french structure to use for what english sentence?
yes, but this is not for beginners so it might be too difficult just yet. Start here: th-cam.com/video/WRUXCXrR6Pw/w-d-xo.htmlsi=RbN1et-Do814Wp0i
Oh, that wasn't so bad at all 😅