Hi,
De sa chambre, mon ami Marc voit le lycée.
Verbe "voir" au présent
Je voisTu voisIl,elle, on voit ( Marc = il)
Nous voyonsVous voyezIls,elles voient
Answer: yes
Explanation:
Because sign language is a form of communication so you don’t have to use words to talk with people there are other ways
Answer: a, ces
explanation: b, c, d, all translate to “this,” while “ces” translates to “these.”
“This” is singular and “these” is plural. Therefore, “these socks,” or in French, “ces chaussettes” makes sense.
hope this helps :)
Answer:
1. We wait/are waiting in the park.
2. I hear the concert.
3. You lose your patience.
4. He visits/is visiting his mother.
5. They answer the question.
6. Claude sells some books.
7. The lawyer defends the criminal.
8. She returns the book to the library.
9. You correspond with a friend in France.
10. You descend the staircase/stairs very rapidly.
Explanation:
I haven't taken French in a while so I'm a little rusty.
Number one should translate to something about putting the princess to sleep; so thus it is "potion magique".
Number two, it's talking about someone using a wand to "transforme" the pumpkin into a carriage.
Number three, is talking about the characters being personified in a "fable".
Number four is simple of course, it being "princesse".
Number five, this is just a lucky guess; I only figure that "fantôme" could translate to phantom.
Number six is "morale".
Number seven is "lègende".
Number eight is "combat".
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