Bonjour
2- Je vais au port.
<em>au => contraction of "à + le</em>
<em />
<em>☺☺☺</em>
<em>Bonjour,</em>
Christine "est" dans la salle de classe de Monsieur Dupont.
Verbe "être" au présent :
<em>je suis</em>
<em>tu es</em>
<em>il,</em>elle<em>, on </em>est (Christine = elle)
<em>nous sommes</em>
<em>vous êtes</em>
<em>ils,elles sont</em>
Hi !!
The answer is written at the end :
Today, teachers have to face a lack of discipline and respect from the students
hope I helped
There are two types of passé composé in French, the verbs that use être and the verbs that use avoir. Avoir and <span>être are called auxiliary verbs or les verbes auxiliares. Avoir is used is most verbs, but there are a few exceptions. The exceptions are called DR & MRS VANDERTRAMP. This is an acronym for the 16 exceptions.
</span>Devenir
Revenir
&
Monter
Rester
Sortir
Venir
Aller
Naître
Descendre
Entrer
Rentrer
Tomber
Retourner
Arriver
Mourir
P<span>artir
</span>
Every single reflexive verb also uses <span>être. These are verbs that in the infinitive form are "se", like <em>se coucher, s'embrasser, </em>and, <em>se prendre.</em></span>