Hi,
<u>Choisissez </u><u>la </u><u>bonne </u><u>forme </u><u>du </u><u>verbe.</u>
→ David vient avec nous.
→ Venez ici, Isabelle et Aurélie!
<em><u>Venir </u></em><em><u>au </u></em><em><u>présent</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>de </u></em><em><u>l'indicatif</u></em><em><u> :</u></em>
Je viens
tu viens
il vient
nous venons
vous venez
ils viennent
<em><u>Venir,</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>à </u></em><em><u>l'impératif</u></em><em><u> </u></em><em><u>présent</u></em><em><u> :</u></em>
ø
Viens
ø
Venons
Venez
ø
✅(•‿•)
Answer:
do it yourself
Explanation:
some questions answers have you don't in Google please get it yourself
Answer:
B seems to make sense
Explanation:
It says "I like gymnastics."
Answer:
Explanation:
Cold, salty water is dense and sinks to the bottom of the ocean while warm water is less dense and remains on the surface. ... Water gets colder with depth because cold, salty ocean water sinks to the bottom of the ocean basins below the less dense warmer water near the surface
Answer:
Well I know, Generally, masculine nouns could ends with “o”, “us” and “son” in languages, and feminine ends with “a”. This happens with languages derived from Italic indo-european language family such as spanish, portuguese and italian.
But I'm not sure if it is the same with French.
Explanation: