French numbers 1-10 are simple: un, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, six, sept, huit, neuf, dix, onze, douze, treize, quatorze, quinze. Numbers 16-19 are formed by adding "dix" to the rightmost digit. Numbers 21-81 are formed by adding "et un". Numbers 22-29, 32-39 are formed by adding the single number to the tens
Both "more friendly" and "friendlier" are correct forms. Short adjectives use "-er" and "than". Long adjectives use "more" before the adjective. Some irregular adjectives like "good" have unique comparative forms
"Voilà" is pronounced [vwa la] and has grave accent on "a". It's a contraction of "vois là" meaning "see there". Used in normal and informal register
Systematic account of British English grammar focusing on meanings. Includes authentic examples and conversations for connected writing. Emphasizes both detailed reference and broad grammar study
Much and many are used with singular uncountable nouns and plural countable nouns. A lot of and lots of are more informal alternatives. These quantifiers can be used with or without a noun
Language change is the alteration of features of languages over time. All living languages are continually undergoing change. Modern linguistics rejects derogatory labels like "corruption"