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"there is/are"
How are these translated to French?
- There is an apple.
- There are apples.
Is it:
- Il est une pomme. // Il y a une pomme.
...for both singular and plural? Any other ways to say that? Also what is this "a" in "il y a"?
Thank you.
Jan 28, 2012 2:34 PM
Answers · 5
2
- There is an apple.
- There are apples.
Is it:
- Il y a une pomme. // Il y a des pommes.
there is/are=il y a
January 28, 2012
My response came a little late i guess ,but let's see from what i know we say il y'a une pomme for the singular and il y'a des pommes for the plural exactly like we say il y'a beacoup d'hommes ce soir :there are lots of men this evening but when we say there are many we say il sont beaucoup ou plusieur when it's a state we conjugate the to be in french which is the verb etre otherwise we look for an alternative to the sentence.
May 22, 2012
Can "il est" mean something like "it is"?
January 28, 2012
Oh, thank you.
January 28, 2012
a = verb avoir (to have).
Verbs are not to be translated litterally from one laguage to the other. It does not work that way.
"il est une pomme" means "he is an apple", and that doesn't make sense.
To show the difference between one and several apples, we say "une" for one and "des" for several.
January 28, 2012
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themax
Language Skills
English, French, Russian, Ukrainian
Learning Language
English, French
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