Bonjour
The two parts of negation usually are
ne ... pas
But you can find as well
ne ... plus <em>(no more)</em>
ne ... jamais <em>(never)</em>
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They have to be on each part of the verb on the présent tense
Tu ne parles pas <em>(you don't speak)</em>
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And on each part of the auxiliare "être" OR "avoir" if you're using the passé composé tense or any "composé" tenses
Tu n'as pas parlé
hope this helps ☺☺☺
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For every 4 games Shane plays, he loses 3 dollars. For every 4 games Grace plays, she loses 2 dollars. After 24 games they will both have 0 dollars.
<span>You are in France, all the businesses are closed and people are giving lilly of the valley as a gift. which holiday is it?
Le Premier mai
(</span><span>the first of May)</span>
Answer:
You / tu are still subject
You/ toi are still an object
it is between 5:30 p.m. and 6 p.m. that "good evening / bonsoir " replaces "hello / bonjour ". It is also customary to use "good evening" to open the discussion and its female equivalent "good evening / bonne soirée " to close it.
Explanation:
Answer:
sportive
Explanation:
No idea maybe if it is written in English
I am not good in Spanish or whatever language this is