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Comprehensive French Grammar Year 10

Comprehensive French Grammar Year 10

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French grammar is structured around grammatical gender, adjective-noun agreement, and rigorous verb conjugations. It follows a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order but modifies sentences significantly with complex pronoun replacements, negations, and the subjunctive mood.

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Expiry period 12 Months
Made in English
Last updated at Tue Jun 2026
Level
Beginner
Total lectures 15
Total quizzes 0
Total duration 116:09:00 Hours
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Short description French grammar is structured around grammatical gender, adjective-noun agreement, and rigorous verb conjugations. It follows a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) word order but modifies sentences significantly with complex pronoun replacements, negations, and the subjunctive mood.
Outcomes
  • The Building Blocks: Nouns, Adjectives, and PronounsNoun Gender & Number: Master the gender of nouns (masculine/feminine) and form plurals correctly to ensure accurate article agreement.Adjective Agreement: Apply rules for placing adjectives (like BAGS rule) and match them in gender and number with the noun they modify.Pronoun Mastery: Use direct/indirect object pronouns, possessive and demonstrative pronouns, and adverbial pronouns (y, en) to avoid repetition and achieve textual cohesion
  • Verb Conjugation and Tense SystemsThe Present Tense: Confidently conjugate regular (-er, -ir, -re) and irregular verbs (être, avoir, faire, aller) in the present tense.Past Narratives: Differentiate and apply the passé composé (completed actions) and the imparfait (background descriptions, habits) in storytelling.Future and Conditional: Use the futur proche (immediate future) and futur simple (distant future), as well as the conditional mood (le conditionnel) to express hypothetical scenarios
  • Syntax and Complex StructuresThe Subjunctive: Understand the subjonctif to express desires, doubts, emotions, or necessities (e.g., Il faut que tu viennes).Relative Clauses: Connect sentences using relative pronouns (qui, que, dont, où) to build complex, fluid thoughts.Passive vs. Active Voice: Form passive sentences and pronominal verbs (reflexive/reciprocal) to accurately depict who or what is performing the action.
  • Spoken vs. Written FluencySpoken Fluency: Internalize sound blending (liaison), silent letters, and nasal vowels to comprehend and produce natural, phonetic spoken French.Written Precision: Spell and structure essays or professional correspondence while observing advanced grammatical nuances, such as advanced past participle agreement.
Requirements
  • Internet
  • Laptop/Desktop