Найди преподавателей языка: английский
nedya
can someone explain me about feminim and gender thing at french language, cause i can't compare it
12 июля 2011 г., 18:22
Ответы · 3
Hello Nedya,
Generally spoken, a noun has the feminine article “la“ if it ends on -ade, -ance, -ée, -elle, -ère, -esse, -ette, -euse, -ie, -ine, -ion, -ise, -té, -tude or -ure.
(As you can see, most of these endings have an “e“ at the end. This makes it even easier to remember them.)
Generally spoken, a noun has the masculine article “le“ if it ends on -age, -aire, -al, -eau, -ment, -et, -ier, -in, -isme, -oir or -on.
On purpose I don‘t want to confuse you with the exceptions from these rules now. :-)
All the best,
Tommy
13 июля 2011 г.
Bonjour,
French nouns, unlike English nouns, have a gender. Every nouns is either masculine or feminine.
Nouns that refer specifically to males (people or animals) such as father, boy, son etc...are masculine. Those that refer to females (people or animals) such as mother, girl, daughter etc... are feminine.
For most other nouns, gender is usually arbitrary and must be memorized with practice...
Good luck !
13 июля 2011 г.
I would love to but I don't exactly get your question. Could you please be a little more precise?
Thank you and have a great day!
12 июля 2011 г.
Все еще не нашли ответы?
Напишите свои вопросы, и пусть вам помогут носители языка!
nedya
Языковые навыки
арабский, английский, французский, немецкий, индонезийский, корейский
Изучаемый язык
французский, немецкий, корейский
Статьи, которые тебе могут быть интересны

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
44 нравится · 9 Комментариев

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 нравится · 6 Комментариев

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 нравится · 23 Комментариев
Еще статьи