Bonjour,
1. Est-ce que tu dormais quand nous sommes arrivés ?
2. Quand j’étais petit, je n’aimais pas voyager.
3. Elle avait seize ans quand elle est allée au Canada.
4. Pleuvait-il quand ils sont arrivés ?
5. Faisiez-vous souvent du ski l’année passée ?
Have a good day ! :-)
Answer:
On the 4 point GPA scale
<h2>MARK ME BRAINLIEST </h2>
<em>Bonjour,</em>
Il faut traverser la rue.
c. to cross
Answer:
“Midi” etymologically comes from Old French. Hence why it seems to be out of place in Modern French.
Mi = half/middle
Di = day
“Mijour” sounds very odd.
We have, on the other hand, the word “mi-journée”, which means the same thing but cannot be used interchangeably with “midi”. The former is used to refer to a vague notion of “halfway through the day”, whilst the latter exclusively refers to a specific time : 12 o'clock.
Explanation:
The answer is definitely true