Mieux
meilleur
mieux
meilleures conditions (<span>feminine plural)
mieux
meilleur
meilleurs
pire
pis
pire
pis
pire
plus
d'avantage
d'avantage
d'avantage
plus
moindre
moins
moins
moindre
moindre
moins
moins
</span>
This structure doesn't work for everything on the attachment. For example,
Question #5 would not be:
"C'est un garçon bel", as that is not simply how one writes it. Instead, the adjective precedes the object, making:
"C'est un bel garçon."
Another example, #7, "C'est un vieux journal."
I don't think it's "C'est un journal vieux...", from what I've learnt.
I don't exactly think there is a definite rule on what types of adjectives go before or after (I think most go after), but personally, I have learnt a some sort of rule from my teacher (by this, I mean that the rule has exceptions) whereby the adjectives that come before the object are encapsulated by this acronym, BANGS, meaning:
<span>Beauty – e.g. beau, belle, moche, etc.
Age – j'ai dix ans (not a c'est + adj + obj structure though)
Number – ils ont deux chiens.
Goodness – bon, bonne, mauvais, mauvaise, etc.
Size – grand, grande, petit, petite, etc.
Hope this helps :D</span>
Plucking parts off a bird. Like the neck, beak, and head. "Je te plumerais" means, I will pluck you.
Answer:
1.Baguette. Ficelle. Brioche. Fougasse. Pain de campagne. Pain complet.
2. They eat it at every meal - breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea (le goûter), apéritifs, dinner
3.Bread so enormously important to the French people, that at the time of the French Revolution in the late 1700's, the average Frenchman was reported to have eaten three pounds a day of bread. If bread supplies ran short, or the quality was bad, riots resulted.
Explanation:
<span>"Je n'ai pas de frères et sœurs"</span>