French is easier than English : r French - Reddit For instance, The english subjunctive is a fairly nebulous concept, but the french subjunctive is so common as to be the bane of every second year french student But, the sentiment is ambiguous-- if French was by its very nature, less ambiguous than english, then we would know exactly what the professor meant to say, if french was used
French or english? : r APlagueTale - Reddit I played the game in french and an amazing and immersive experience, having the game in french with eng sub gave me a more realistic feeling of the game's atmosphere To my opinion, the moment Amicia said: 'dont touch my family' in rage, sounded better french than the english dub
Best French-English dictionary? : r French - Reddit Does anyone have any recommendations for a good French to English dictionary for someone who is completely new to the French language, but is studying it to become fluent?
English taught French Universities. : r france - Reddit The go-to resource for programs in France is Campus France They have a listing of programs taught in English here where you can sort by degree type and field Most licence programs taught in English are going to be at private universities and thus will be much more expensive There are more opportunities at the master's level
A Brief English-French Hockey Dictionary : r hockey - Reddit English is the bastard child of German and French who lived with uncle Norwegian while his parents were fighting It’s funny that English borrowed heavily from French only to be borrowed heavily from by French later
Is French a more economical language than English in terms . . . - Reddit Very frequently the French phrase returned to me by the dictionary is simpler and more economical than the original in English I've noticed this enough that, at this point, I'm wondering if this tends to be a general characteristic of the way French is spoken, compared to "wordier" English
French Learning Method (Native English speaker) : r French - Reddit Hi, Foreword: Native English speaker learning French Thought I would share my language learning methods and offer a basic example of how I study Currently learning French (1 yr +) and Italian (approaching 3 months) NOTE: This method works best if you have a basic grounding in the language and know basic vocabularly and some basic tenses (present, passé, imperfect) However I have used it
Which language is more difficult to learn: French or English? English is very inconsistent when it comes to spelling and how it relates to pronunciation French has a lot silent letters, which can be confusing at first, but once you know the rules, it's fairly consistent (French is easier in this area) Both languages have sounds that are absent from many other languages