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What is the purpose of “me” in “Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.”?
Ways to learn grammar innately?How is the word “ne” used in sentences?What does “en train” mean?What pronoun to use in place of “en qqn”?Confusion over use of “avoir” vs “être” in “ne rien avoir de”What does “cela” mean in the following sentence?What does “faire intervenir” mean?Why does “que ça” mean “at it” in this instance?Why is it “place”, not “places” in a sentence: “J'ai assez de place.”?How is the word “soit” used in “soit l'équivalent de”?
The sentence
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
can be translated as
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
However, I don't understand the purpose of "me" in that sentence; for example,
je -> I
suit trompe -> have made
dans -> in
mon calcul -> my calculation
so if we didn't put "me" there, would the meaning change ?
grammaire sens
add a comment |
The sentence
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
can be translated as
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
However, I don't understand the purpose of "me" in that sentence; for example,
je -> I
suit trompe -> have made
dans -> in
mon calcul -> my calculation
so if we didn't put "me" there, would the meaning change ?
grammaire sens
add a comment |
The sentence
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
can be translated as
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
However, I don't understand the purpose of "me" in that sentence; for example,
je -> I
suit trompe -> have made
dans -> in
mon calcul -> my calculation
so if we didn't put "me" there, would the meaning change ?
grammaire sens
The sentence
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
can be translated as
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
However, I don't understand the purpose of "me" in that sentence; for example,
je -> I
suit trompe -> have made
dans -> in
mon calcul -> my calculation
so if we didn't put "me" there, would the meaning change ?
grammaire sens
grammaire sens
edited 6 hours ago
onurcanbektas
asked 7 hours ago
onurcanbektasonurcanbektas
1225
1225
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
You confusion is due to the fact the most idiomatic ways to express it differs between French and English. However there are alternative forms with a closer structure in both cases.
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
word by word translates to:
J'ai fait une erreur dans mon calcul.
while
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
literally translates to:
I mislead myself in my computation.
add a comment |
This particular verb in French that means "to make an error", "to err", is a pronominal verb; it's just like that; you can use other verbs, but they are not heard so often and they are verbal locutions instead of simple one word terms: "commettre une erreur", "faire une erreur". In a pronominal verb, just as in English, you have to use the pronoun all the time; there is no way to omit it. This pronoun, moreover, has nothing to do with the possessive adjective "mon"; that word is in the noun group not the verb group: you can replace it by all of these words in turn and say something a little different each time without changing the verb;
ce, le, un, leur, ses, mes, tous ces, certains, etc. ("calcul" or "calculs" according to gender)
The conjugation is as follows ;
je me suis trompé
tu t'es trompé
il s'est trompé
nous nous sommes trompés
vous vous êtes trompés
ils se sont trompés
add a comment |
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2 Answers
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active
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
You confusion is due to the fact the most idiomatic ways to express it differs between French and English. However there are alternative forms with a closer structure in both cases.
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
word by word translates to:
J'ai fait une erreur dans mon calcul.
while
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
literally translates to:
I mislead myself in my computation.
add a comment |
You confusion is due to the fact the most idiomatic ways to express it differs between French and English. However there are alternative forms with a closer structure in both cases.
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
word by word translates to:
J'ai fait une erreur dans mon calcul.
while
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
literally translates to:
I mislead myself in my computation.
add a comment |
You confusion is due to the fact the most idiomatic ways to express it differs between French and English. However there are alternative forms with a closer structure in both cases.
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
word by word translates to:
J'ai fait une erreur dans mon calcul.
while
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
literally translates to:
I mislead myself in my computation.
You confusion is due to the fact the most idiomatic ways to express it differs between French and English. However there are alternative forms with a closer structure in both cases.
I've made a mistake in my calculation.
word by word translates to:
J'ai fait une erreur dans mon calcul.
while
Je me suis trompé dans mon calcul.
literally translates to:
I mislead myself in my computation.
answered 6 hours ago
jlliagrejlliagre
64.7k244102
64.7k244102
add a comment |
add a comment |
This particular verb in French that means "to make an error", "to err", is a pronominal verb; it's just like that; you can use other verbs, but they are not heard so often and they are verbal locutions instead of simple one word terms: "commettre une erreur", "faire une erreur". In a pronominal verb, just as in English, you have to use the pronoun all the time; there is no way to omit it. This pronoun, moreover, has nothing to do with the possessive adjective "mon"; that word is in the noun group not the verb group: you can replace it by all of these words in turn and say something a little different each time without changing the verb;
ce, le, un, leur, ses, mes, tous ces, certains, etc. ("calcul" or "calculs" according to gender)
The conjugation is as follows ;
je me suis trompé
tu t'es trompé
il s'est trompé
nous nous sommes trompés
vous vous êtes trompés
ils se sont trompés
add a comment |
This particular verb in French that means "to make an error", "to err", is a pronominal verb; it's just like that; you can use other verbs, but they are not heard so often and they are verbal locutions instead of simple one word terms: "commettre une erreur", "faire une erreur". In a pronominal verb, just as in English, you have to use the pronoun all the time; there is no way to omit it. This pronoun, moreover, has nothing to do with the possessive adjective "mon"; that word is in the noun group not the verb group: you can replace it by all of these words in turn and say something a little different each time without changing the verb;
ce, le, un, leur, ses, mes, tous ces, certains, etc. ("calcul" or "calculs" according to gender)
The conjugation is as follows ;
je me suis trompé
tu t'es trompé
il s'est trompé
nous nous sommes trompés
vous vous êtes trompés
ils se sont trompés
add a comment |
This particular verb in French that means "to make an error", "to err", is a pronominal verb; it's just like that; you can use other verbs, but they are not heard so often and they are verbal locutions instead of simple one word terms: "commettre une erreur", "faire une erreur". In a pronominal verb, just as in English, you have to use the pronoun all the time; there is no way to omit it. This pronoun, moreover, has nothing to do with the possessive adjective "mon"; that word is in the noun group not the verb group: you can replace it by all of these words in turn and say something a little different each time without changing the verb;
ce, le, un, leur, ses, mes, tous ces, certains, etc. ("calcul" or "calculs" according to gender)
The conjugation is as follows ;
je me suis trompé
tu t'es trompé
il s'est trompé
nous nous sommes trompés
vous vous êtes trompés
ils se sont trompés
This particular verb in French that means "to make an error", "to err", is a pronominal verb; it's just like that; you can use other verbs, but they are not heard so often and they are verbal locutions instead of simple one word terms: "commettre une erreur", "faire une erreur". In a pronominal verb, just as in English, you have to use the pronoun all the time; there is no way to omit it. This pronoun, moreover, has nothing to do with the possessive adjective "mon"; that word is in the noun group not the verb group: you can replace it by all of these words in turn and say something a little different each time without changing the verb;
ce, le, un, leur, ses, mes, tous ces, certains, etc. ("calcul" or "calculs" according to gender)
The conjugation is as follows ;
je me suis trompé
tu t'es trompé
il s'est trompé
nous nous sommes trompés
vous vous êtes trompés
ils se sont trompés
edited 3 hours ago
answered 6 hours ago
LPHLPH
8,678421
8,678421
add a comment |
add a comment |
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