AmourDeFrance

joined 2 months ago
MODERATOR OF
 

Random question, but what if Cinderella got with a lady instead!! :)

Then she's not a friend... sorry

 

https://youtu.be/qkHM1e3mKBE

I’m about to watch this, I found it very cool.

 

https://youtu.be/T5kPznazX84

These are both languages I learn on Busuu and teach what I know.

[–] AmourDeFrance@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I need to record it from Busuu so I’ll just use Google Translate real quick

 

Hoe gaat het? - How are you?/How’s it going?

Het gaat goed! - It’s going well!

Goed - good

En met jou? - How about you? (And (with) you? / And (how’s it going with) you?)

Hoi, iedereen (everyone). Hoe gaat het? Het gaat goed met mij (me). En met jullie? (Plural you)

5
Les 2: Hoe heet je? (sh.itjust.works)
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by AmourDeFrance@sh.itjust.works to c/ginas_nederlandse@sh.itjust.works
 

Hoe heet je? - What is your name?

En jij? - And you?

Ik heet - My name is…

Hoi! Ik heet Gina. En jij? Aangenaam!

 

Wie heißt du? means What is your name?

You can reply with “Ich bin…” or “ich heiße…”

To reply to “Freut mich” (nice to meet you), you can just say “freut mich auch!” (Nice to meet you too!)

Wie heißt du? Ich heiße Gina. Freut mich!

 

“My name is” is Ich heiße. This can also be spelled as “ich heisse”, as the ß is a double s.

“I’m…” is ich bin…

Freut mich! - Nice to meet you! This literally means “pleases me” :)

“It pleases me to get to know you” 😊

Introduce yourselves in the replies.

Hallo! Ich heiße Gina.

 

To say “hi”, you can just say “hoi!” casually

Ik heet… - my name is…

Aangenaam! - Nice to meet you!

Now you try introducing yourself in the replies!!

Hoi! Ik heet Gina.

 

To say hello is very easy. You just say “Hallo”. You can also say “hi!”

To say “bye”, you can informally say “Tschüss”!

I clicked the wrong thing, thanks for the heads up!

 

Salut ! Welcome to Gina's French Lessons! Today, I will be teaching you definite articles in French.

French has gendered articles, either masculine or feminine.

When the word is "masculine", you use "le". When it's feminine, you use "la".

When it's plural (m. or f.), you use "les."

When it starts with a silent "h" or a vowel, "le" and "la" are shortened to "l'".

------------------- Examples ---------------------------

Masculine:

Le village - The village

Le pont - the bridge

Feminine:

La ville - the city

La région - the region

Plural:

Les villages - the villages

Les villes - the cities

L':

L'océan - the ocean

L'ami - the friend

L'île - the island

L'autoroute - the highway

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submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by AmourDeFrance@sh.itjust.works to c/newcommunities@lemmy.world

Exercise-induced is what I have, but the cold can trigger it too 😭

Ouu ! Mon diagnostic était tardif

I had the undiagnosed symptoms since childhood, I believe, like the closed-up chest, but it got worse as a teen from what i remember.

Well, one day, it was Freshman Gym class. We had to take a running test, and I noticeably started to feel like my lungs were on fire after the seventh lap or so. By the tenth lap, it felt like my chest was very tight, burning, and my head felt very light. I felt myself start to double over and my eyes nearly closed. I told my friend, and she said: "I have asthma. It sounds like you do, too."

I told my Mom and Dad and they took me to a doctor for a possible diagnosis. The doctor gave me an inhaler and said I had asthma.

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