Distinguishing between having and being (Part 2/2)
Distinguishing between having and being (Part 2/2)
Lesson details
Key learning points
- In this lesson, we will practise using 'être' and "avoir" to distinguish between having and being, and we use the subject pronoun 'it'.
Content guidance
- Contains external content.
Supervision
Adult supervision recommended
Licence
This content is made available by Oak National Academy Limited and its partners and licensed under Oak’s terms & conditions (Collection 1), except where otherwise stated.
Loading...
Some of our videos, including non-English language videos, do not have captions.
10 Questions
Q1.
What does 'un professeur' mean?
a singer (m)
a teacher (f)
Q2.
What does 'une chanteuse' mean?
a friend (m)
a singer (m)
Q3.
What does 'un ami' mean?
a friend (f)
a man
Q4.
How do you say 'a man' in French?
un ami
une femme
Q5.
How do you say 'a woman' in French?
un homme
une amie
Q6.
Which one of the words below means 'funny'?
intéressant
sympa
Q7.
Which one of the words below means 'nice'?
drôle
intéressant
Q8.
How do you say 'true' in French?
faux
sympa
Q9.
How do you say 'he/it' in French?
elle
je
Q10.
How do you say 'she/it' in French?
it
je
10 Questions
Q1.
What does 'un chien' mean?
a book
a ruler
Q2.
What does 'un livre' mean?
a computer
a mobile friend
Q3.
What does 'une voiture' mean?
a bike
a ruler
Q4.
How do you say 'a computer' in French?
un portable
une voiture
Q5.
How do you say 'a bike' in French?
une chambre
une voiture
Q6.
How do you say 'a mobile phone' in French?
un chien
un ordinateur
Q7.
How do you say 'a bedroom' in French?
un livre
une règle
Q8.
Which one of the following can ONLY mean 'it is' when you are referring to a masculine noun?
c'est
elle est
Q9.
Which one of the following can ONLY mean 'it is' when you are referring to a feminine noun?
c'est
il est
Q10.
Which one of the following can mean 'it is' referring to either a masculine or a feminine noun?
elle est
il est