Monday, October 21, 2019
Top 10 Advanced French Mistakes
Top 10 Advanced French Mistakes          If you speak French at an advanced level, congratulations! You may not be fluent yet, but youre definitely on your way. Nonetheless, there are probably a few concepts you can use a bit of help with. Oftentimes these are small details that dont affect your listeners comprehension, but mistakes are mistakes and if you want to be fluent you need to avoid them. Here are the ten most common French mistakes and difficulties for advanced speakers, with links to lessons.          Rhythm      Pronunciation-wise, one of the last things most French students master is the rhythm of French. In many languages, words and sentences have stressed syllables, but French does not. It can be very difficult to get the hang of giving each syllable the same stress when ones own language is so different, especially when trying to stress the importance of a particular word. Understanding French rhythm is the first step to being able to mimic it.           vs. De      The prepositions  and de cause endless problems for French students because they are used in similar constructions to mean different things.          De, du, de la, or des?      Another pitfall for advanced French speakers has to do with the preposition de and the indefinite and partitive articles. French teachers commonly receive questions about whether a given phrase should be followed by de or by du, de la, or des.          Verbs with Prepositions      In English, many verbs require a certain preposition in order for the meaning of the verb to be complete, such as to look at and to listen to. The same is true in French, but the prepositionsà  required for French verbs are often not the same as the ones required by their English counterparts. In addition, some verbs that require a preposition in English dont take one in French, and vice versa. It all boils down to memorizing verbs with their prepositions.          Cest vs. Il est      The expressions cest and il est are often confused. Like  and de, above, cest and il est have strict rules on usage- they may mean something similar, but their usage is quite distinct.          Leà  facultatif      As an advanced French speaker, you should be very familiar withà  leà  asà  aà  definite articleà  andà  direct object pronoun. What you may not know is that there are two optional uses ofà  le. Theà  neuter object pronounà  leà  isà  an optional, formal construction found most commonly in written French, andà  là  is sometimes used in front ofà  onà  to increase euphony in French.          Indefinite French      I find that one of the hardest things to translate into another language is indefiniteness, such as anyone, something, everywhere, all the time. This index includes links to lessons on every kind of indefiniteness, fromà  indefinite adjectivesà  to theà  indefinite subject pronounà  on.ââ¬â¹          Impersonal French      Grammatically speaking,à  impersonalà  refers to words or structures which are invariable; that is, they do not specify a grammatical person. This is, like indefiniteness, a fairly difficult concept for many students of French.          Reflexive vs.à  Object Pronouns      Reflexive pronounsà  are used withà  pronominal verbs, while object pronouns are used withà  transitive verbs, and they have very different purposes. Yet they cause problems for many students due to the issue ofà  agreementà  with pronouns that precede a compound verb. Before you worry aboutà  agreement, though, you need to be sure you understand the difference between reflexive and direct object pronouns- how to use them, separately and together.          Agreement      I can almost guarantee that you have trouble with some aspect ofà  agreement,à  because even native speakers have trouble with it sometimes! There are numerous types of agreement, but the most difficult tend to be agreement with direct objects that precede compound verbs and with pronominal verbs.    
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