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French I
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False Friends
French I: Verb Charts
Irregular Verbs
Regular Verbs
French I: Pronunciation
Accents
Vowels
Nasal Sounds
Consonants
Introduction to French I
Liaison and Elision
French I: Everyday Words and Phrases
Days and Dates
Time
Seasons
Weather
Cognates
False Friends
Getting Ready for the Basics
Greetings and Salutations
Numbers
French I: Articles
Definite Articles
Indefinite Articles
Partitive Articles
Definite versus Partitive
Demonstrative Adjectives
Understanding Articles
French I: Nouns
The Gender of Nouns
The Plural of Nouns
French I: Possession
Possession Using
de
Possession Using
être à
Possessive Adjectives
French I: Pronouns
Independent (Stress) Pronouns
Relative Pronouns
Subject Pronouns
Using Object Pronouns
French I: Present Tense of Verbs
Regular Verbs
Regular Verbs with Spelling Changes
Irregular Verbs
Idiomatic Expressions
Commands
The Infinitive Form
French I: Negation
Common Negative Words and Phrases
Forming the Negative
French I: Interrogatives Exclamations
Asking for Information
Exclaiming
Asking Yes or No Questions
French I: Adjectives
Adjective Placement within Sentences
Changing Masculine to Singular Feminine
Forming Plural from Singular Adjectives
French I: Adverbs
Adverbial Expressions
Placing Adverbs within Sentences
Forming Adverbs
French I: Comparisons
Comparisons of Equality
Comparative and Superlative Expressions
Expressing Comparisons of Inequality
French I: Prepositions
Expressing “In”
Contractions of Two Prepositions
Prepositions with Geographical Locations
Prepositional Modifiers
Verbs Requiring Indirect Objects
Prepositions Before Infinitives
Using Prepositions
French I: The Passe Compose
Past Participles of Regular Verbs
Past Participles of Irregular Verbs
The Passé Composé with Être
Special Verbs that Use
Être
and
Avoir
Introduction to the
Passé Composé
The
Passé Composé
with Avoir
French I: The Imperfect
Imperfect Tense and Regular Verbs
Imperfect Verbs with Spelling Changes
Imperfect Tense and Irregular Verbs
Imperfect Versus
Passé Composé
Introduction to the Imperfect
French I: The Future and the Conditional
Future Tense
The Conditional
French I: Reflexive Verbs
Idiomatic Reflexive Verbs
Reflexive Verbs and Commands
Reflexive Verbs and Compound Tenses
Conjugating Reflexive Verbs
Reflexive or Non‐Reflexive?
French I: The Subjunctive
Forms of the Subjunctive
Subjunctive versus Infinitive
Uses of the Subjunctive
Related Topics:
French II
False Friends
False friends are words that are spelled the same or almost the same in both French and English but have entirely different meanings and can be different parts of speech. The most common ones to watch out for are in Table 1
.
Cite this article
Cliff's Notes
I need help locating a Web site that has pronunciation of the Spanish alphabet. For example, in English we sing", A, B, C, D, E, F, G . . .etc. Where can I find the Spanish alphabet?"
Are there any Spanish words bearing even a minute similarity to the name Peter? Not a name, but any word that is in any way similar to Peter.
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