Answer:
Tu adores le livre.
Nous habitons en France.
David et Albert jouent le football.
Vous étudiez le livre de français.
Il mange un croque-monsieur.
Elles aiment l'ordinateur.
Answer:
Moi, oui je fais mes devoirs.
Mon père et ma mère font du camping chaque été.
Il fait du jogging.
Qu’est-ce que vous faites après l’école?
Est ce que tu fais du baby-sitting?
Explanation:
Answer:
Partitive articles are used both in English and in French to express quantities that cannot be counted. While the indefinite article (un, une, des) is used with countable quantities (un oeuf, deux oeufs, etc.), the partitive article is used before nouns that are indivisible or uncountable.
Explanation:
Bonjour
<em>The museum houses many medieval artifacts. It has many tapestries.</em>
[<em>Le musée </em>] [ qui abrite beaucoup d'artefacts <em>(objets) </em>médiévaux,] [ <em>a beaucoup de tapisseries</em>.]
<em>the museum that houses many medieval artefacts, has many tapestries.</em>
<em />
OR
[Le musée ] [qui a beaucoup de tapisseries,] [ abrite beaucoup d'artefacts <em>(objets) </em>médiévaux.]
<em>The museum that has many tapestries, houses many medieval artefacts.</em>
<em />
<em>OR</em>
<em />
[Le musée abrite beaucoup d'artefacts <em>(objets)</em> médiévaux ] [ qui sont des tapisseries.]
<em>Ithe museum houses many medieval artifacts which are tapestries.</em>
OR
Le musée abrite beaucoup d'artefacts <em>(objets) </em>médiévaux dont des tapisseries.
<em>the museum houses many medieval artfacts "including" tapestries.</em>
-
hope one of them will be one you're waiting for.
They are all correct in French ☺☺☺