Answer:
Bonjour Sarah, ma correspondante [My penpal] ! C'est tellement agréable de pouvoir parler avec vous. J'ai toujours voulu aller en France, alors j'ai quelques questions pour vous. Pour notre première lettre, pourriez-vous s'il vous plaît me parler de vous et de la nature de la France ? Ici à [where you live], c'est très beau et l'herbe est très verte.
- [your name]
Please Note: This letter uses present tense grammar and doesn't use any type of past tense or impartif/future simple.
Votre ami de Brainly,
<em>daintysword -</em>
Answer:
“Midi” etymologically comes from Old French. Hence why it seems to be out of place in Modern French.
Mi = half/middle
Di = day
“Mijour” sounds very odd.
We have, on the other hand, the word “mi-journée”, which means the same thing but cannot be used interchangeably with “midi”. The former is used to refer to a vague notion of “halfway through the day”, whilst the latter exclusively refers to a specific time : 12 o'clock.
Explanation:
The midpoint between two numbers is the number exactly in the middle of the two numbers. Calculating the midpoint is the same thing as calculating the average of two numbers. Therefore, you can calculate the midpoint between any two numbers by adding them together and dividing by two.
HEY THERE.
THE ANSWER IS
Imparfait = what was happening all around you (including you), background. Also ongoing events, habits, what used to be.
Passé composé = what took place at that very moment: a specific event or a succession of specific events, the main storyline.