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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.
Voici quelque chose que j’ai trouvé sur Lawless French. https://www.lawlessfrench.com/grammar/pronominal-verbs/
The grammatical term "pronominal" means "relating to a pronoun." You know that conjugated verbs (almost) always need a subject pronoun, but pronominal verbs need a reflexive pronoun as well. - Lawless French
Thanks but can someone maybe explain it to me with their own words because ive watched many videos about it and googled about it but i still dont understand it!
tbh, lawless french's explanation is hard to beat
you really should try to read that first because I doubt anyone of us could come up with better
if, after having tried that, you're still not getting it, asking us specific questions about where you're not understanding things would allow us to tailor our answers to what you might need
Okay thanks
Okay i understand it now but I have another question. When i have to put sentence parts in the correct order with French reflexive verbs, how do i know the correct word order? Is subject + reflexive pronoun + conjugated verb + rest always correct?
In a declarative sentence, yes, I'm pretty sure that's always correct
In an imperative sentence, it's a bit more complex
Thank you and i dont think we do those yet so its okay
Reflexive pronouns work the same way as regular ones.
Hi, which book is this