“Slowly I dance out of the burning house of my head.”
— Mark Strand, from The Compete Poems; “The Way It Is,” wr. c. June 1975
“Slowly I dance out of the burning house of my head.”
— Mark Strand, from The Compete Poems; “The Way It Is,” wr. c. June 1975
18/5/2018
The prepositions À and De can change based on whether or not a definite article (le, la, les) follows them. If that happens, the prepositions change in the following ways:
To put them to use, we can take the follow examples:
I hope this helps a bit. I’ll post about when to use “de” versus “du, de la, des” in my next post.

(A/N: this was a spur of a moment piece I wrote because this picture FUCKED me up, it’s a quickie ;D pun intended BUT PLEASE TELL ME WHAT YOU THOUGHT!!!!)