<em>Bonjour,</em>
<em>La chemise verte. (féminin/singulier)</em>
<em>La chemise blanche.</em>
<em>Les chemises vertes. (féminin/pluriel)</em>
<em>Les chemises vertes.</em>
<em>Le pantalon vert. (masculin/singulier)</em>
<em>Le pantalon blanc.</em>
<em>Les pantalons verts. (masculin/pluriel)</em>
<em>Les pantalons blancs.</em>
Gian is at the end of both
In homes, french homes have the shower and bathroom located in different rooms. American homes have the bathroom and shower all in one room. French bedrooms also tend to be smaller than Americans.
Their Highschool schedule is like American college schedule. They have different classes on different days. And I'm not sure if they still do, but they used to have a 4 day week instead of a 5 day week. They take Fridays off.
Answer:
One of the main French Easter traditions are the Easter bells or les cloches de Pâques. ... The bells would then ring on Easter Sunday to announce the Resurrection of Christ and therefore 'return'. So in France it is the bells rather than the Easter bunny who delivers the Easter eggs.
Explanation:
<em>Bonjour ! </em>
Je voudrais boire "de l'eau fraîche".
- de l'