What do you think about it French?

What do you think about it French?

qu’en penses-tu

Et toi, qu’en penses-tu?

What is qu’est-ce qu?

1) Qu’est-ce que…? Qu’est-ce que is a French way to start a question. Literally, it’s built with three French words: Que + est + ce → “What + is + it/that?…” As a French question, it’s a longer way to ask: “What…?” It’s correct French, but in real, everyday spoken French, we tend to ask shorter questions.

What is Qu est-ce que tu?

Qu’est-ce que tu fais? : What are you doing?

Is it rude to say Quoi?

In English, if you didn’t hear someone, simply saying “What?” would be considered informal or even rude, and the same goes for quoi. As someone who’s slightly hard of hearing, I learned this the hard way.

What do you think in French?

How to say “What do you think?” in French (Qu’en penses-tu?)

Do you think about it French duolingo?

“Qu’est-ce que tu en penses?” => “What do you think of it?”. (It states that both “penser de” and “penser à” can use either “of” or “about”.

Is est ce que formal?

Though est-ce que is widespread in spoken French, it’s much less common in writing because it’s slightly informal. Remember that if you’re in a formal situation, you should avoid it in favor of inversion.

Is est-ce que formal?

Is est-ce necessary?

The phrase est-ce que is used to ask a question. Word order stays just the same as it would in an ordinary sentence. Est-ce que comes before the subject, and the verb comes after the subject. So to turn the sentence Tu connais Marie (meaning You know Marie) into a question, all you need to do is to add est-ce que.

What does je ne c’est quoi mean?

: something (such as an appealing quality) that cannot be adequately described or expressed. a young actress who has a certain je ne sais quoi.

Why do French people add Quoi?

Using quoi at the end of a sentence is a colloquial French filler word. It doesn’t translate well, but it’s used to mean “I don’t care. / In short / And that’s all. / It’s simple, let’s not dive into it too much, it’s as simple as that…”

What do you think to Spanish?

¿qué le parece?
Spanish: ¿qué le parece? – ¿cómo la ve? – ¿qué opinión le merece? Forum discussions with the word(s) “What do you think?” in the title: But what do you think it should be like?

How do you say you thought about it in French?

I’ve thought about it. JAMAIS DE LA VIE… j’y ai pensé.

What kind of dress do you want in French duolingo?

“Quel genre de robe voulez-vous?” – Duolingo.

How do you use est-ce que tu?

What is n’est pas?

Most of the time, n’est-ce pas is used in conversation when the speaker, who already expects a certain response, asks a question mainly as a rhetorical device. Literally translated, n’est-ce pas means “is it not,” though most speakers understand it to mean “isn’t it?” or “aren’t you?”

Do French people say est-ce que?

What is Je ne sais pas?

I don’t know.

Do I have a je ne sais quoi?

What does je ne sais quoi mean? Je ne sais quoi literally means “I don’t know what” in French. The phrase was borrowed into English as an expression of a quality that makes something or someone attractive, distinctive, or special in some way, but is hard to put into words.

What is par quoi?

as a result of what, Mod. whatever, Adj.

Why do French say LA at the end?

It’s called a filler word, same thing exist in english, like, I mean, you know. Another similar filler word people add to the end of sentences is “quoi”. As explained in another answer, it is just a filler word. It is actually the adverb “là” (“there”).

What do you think Duolingo?

Duo is teaching the phrase “¿Qué te parece?” because (as user nEjh0qr4 explained earlier) Spanish speakers use it, and, when they use it they can mean “What do you think?” when asking someone their opinion.

Is your sister doing well in French duolingo?

60 Comments. This discussion is locked.
So you would say “Tu vas bien” and “Il va bien”.

Do French people actually use est-ce que?

What is the difference between Qu est-ce que and Qu est-ce qui?

Qu’est-ce que and que are pretty much synonymous —> what. Qu’est-ce qui, when using this phrase, it will ALWAYS be followed by a verb whereas qu’est-ce que will be followed USUALLY by a noun or other subject in the same manner as que tu est triste instead qui est triste.

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