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Micah
Can someone explain Faut, Falloir, and Failler.
Hello French speakers and learners,
It seems that "Faut" can be a conjugation of both "Falloir" and "Failler." Are these two words synonyms? How are they different?
Jul 26, 2015 3:45 AM
Answers · 6
1
"il faut"
is the il/elle at the present time for the verb "Faillir" and "Falloir"
But their meaning are totally different.
Fallir : to fail something
Falloir : it is when you have to do something, express a need
As a french people, I never read or say the verb "Faillir" at the present time.
And i didn't know it was also "il faut".
So everytime, you can read or hear "il faut": it will always be the "Falloir" verb that express something that you have/need to do.
July 26, 2015
Maybe you said "failler" because you saw the subjunctive form of the verb "falloir"? It would make more sense! :)
http://en.bab.la/dictionary/french-english/il-faille
July 26, 2015
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Micah
Language Skills
English, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Learning Language
French
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