#fyrebeest
1 messages · Page 1 of 1 (latest)
Our volunteers look into many questions every day; sometimes it takes them a little while to answer.
Make it descriptive, including relevant context, but also to the point. This way you improve your chances of getting a more relevant and specific answer.
there are mandatory liaisons after inverted forms of verbs (e.g. prends-en)
optional liaisons after verbs, from most common to least common: between être auxiliary and past participle, être and attribute, avoir and past participle (t liaisons are forbidden when avoir follows the pronoun "te"), specifically "as" + past participle is even less common, semi-auxiliaries, r liaisons after infinitives
what about in extreme formal situations with lesser used verbs like chanter?
can you provide an example?
Je chantais......(insert initial vowel word)
in formal speech could there be a liaison?