<span>B for beauty: beau (beautiful), joli (pretty)A for age: jeune (young), vieux (old), nouveau (new)G for goodness: bon (good), meilleur (better), mauvais (bad), gentil (kind)<span>S for size: petit (small), haut (high), gros (fat)</span></span>
Bonjour
1- Comment chantes- tu ? <em>(verb chanter; 2nd pers sing. informal you)</em>
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<em>2- </em>Mes amis et moi jouons au tennis. <em> (verb jouer; 1st person plur. we=nous)</em>
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3- Les enfants regardent la télé. <em>(regarder. 3rd person plur; ils/elles = they)</em>
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4- Vous aimez aller au cinéma le week-end. <em>(aimer; 2nd pers. plural; plural & formal = vous)</em>
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5- Il mange au restaurant le lundi. <em>(manger; 3rd person sing.; il/elle/on = he/she/it)</em>
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☺☺☺
<h2>
THREE ASPECTS OF FRENCH CULTURE DIFFERENT FROM THE US</h2>
-The French observe 11 official public holidays. 5 of them are civil holidays (New Year's Day, May Day, Victory in Europe Day, Bastille Day and WWI Armistice Day) and 6 have a religious origin based on the Catholic faith (Easter Monday, Ascension Day, Whit Monday, Assumption Day, All Saints' Day, and Christmas).
-Soupe à l'oignon. This is a traditional French soup made of onions and beef stock
-The traditional dress in France depends on the region, but consists of items like lace-trimmed blouses, aprons with colorful flowers and white, flared bonnets. The one thing that France's regional costumes have in common is that they are all based on late 18th century rural clothing.
Explanation:
À Paris j'aimerais voir la tour Eiffel et visiter les restaurants.J'aimerais aussi aller dans les magasins et juste visiter toute la ville