I think the correct answer is A
Explanation:
The past tense is formed with the auxiliary being or having conjugated in the present tense followed by the past participle. The past tense is used to refer to a single action completed in the past. It allows to underline the result or the consequence of this action in the present.
the past tense composed of the majority of verbs is formed with avoir (have). The auxiliary être (be) is used:
-with the following 14 verbs: naître/mourir, aller/venir, monter/descendre, arriver/partir, entrer/sortir, apparaître, rester, retourner, tomber et leurs formes composées, for example : revenir, rentrer, remonter, redescendre, repartir. (to be born / die, to come / to come, to go up / to go down, to arrive / to go, to enter / to leave, to appear, to stay, to return, to fall and their composed forms, for example: to return, to return, to go up, to go down, to start again.)
- with pronominal verbs.
Tu fais du ski, monsieur. Tu skies toujours dans les montagnes. Les montagnes enneigées, cependant.
Hello,
Nous ne prenons pas de frites.
Vous ne mangez pas de légumes.
Hi,
Complete the following phrase using one of the following: le, la, l’, les
Il me faut une règle. Tu aimes (answer) jaune?
The answer : IL me faut une règle . Tu aimes _la_ jaune?
-Why the answer is "la"?
-- The answer is "la" because the word "règle " in french is a feminine noun .
•It was nice to help you, Democritus!