#sonothe1st
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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.
Conjugation is something that applies only to verbs, not objects
Direct objects are linked directly to the verb (j'aime le fromage)
Indirect objects are separated from the verb by a preposition (je parle à mon ami)
You can sometimes have both for one verb (j'envoie la lettre à ma tante)
There's no "conjugation" for nouns or pronouns but if it's a pronoun it will depend on the person like in English
Ah so this relates back to cods and cois since there's no conjugation but rather one is direct and indirect and so you use le, la, or les or like à mon ami for a coi or lui or leur or other things. But for aller La pomme que j’ai mangée
(COD before → mangée adds e)
But in verbes pronominaux they don't need these cods and cois so they're just reflexive pronouns like me, te, se, nous, vous, se?
Me, te, se, nous, vous can be EITHER direct or indirect, you just have to know which it is
like based off the sentence right
Elle s'est cassé la jambe
Elle s'est couchée
For the most part, if you're not sure, you try to reword the sentence and see if it would be direct or not
Sometimes this doesn't work, when the verb only exists in the pronominal form. These ones will always use a direct object
This has a decent number of examples and tricks on how to figure out if it's direct or not
The explanations aren't always my favourite but just let us know if there's anything you're confused about