Bonjour
1- Je déteste me raser.
<em>(when a verb follows another one, it is infinitive tense; to make sure change for a verb ending in -IR, for example)</em>
<em>-</em>
2- <u>S'amuser</u> <em>present</em> <em>imperative 2nd person plural</em>
<em> </em>Amusez-vous !
<u>S'amuser . </u><u><em>imperative</em></u>
<em> Amuse-toi ! (tu = 2nd person singular)</em>
<em> Amusons-nous! (1st p. plural)</em>
<em> Amusez-vous ! (2nd person plural)</em>
<em>-</em>
3- <u>Ne pas se préparer</u> <em>present imperative (1st person plural)</em>
Ne nous préparons pas !
<u><em>ne pas se préparer imperative</em></u>
<em> </em><em>ne te prépare pas !</em>
<em> ne nous préparons pas !</em>
<em> ne vous préparez pas !</em>
<em>-</em>
<em>☺☺☺</em>
Answer:
Do you think that money buys happiness? Whatever your point of view, you present it in an argumentative development illustrated with examples from your experience.
You should probably answer this yourself, but I translated this for you. Hope it's accurate enough!
Bonjour
<em>Your plane is at 18:40</em>
<em />
18:40 = 6:40 p.m.
-
6: 40 a.m. = 6:40
6:40 p.m. = 18:40
7:40 a.m. = 7:40
8:40 p.m. = 20:40
-
EXPLANATION
time goes from 1 to noon <em>(une heure --> midi) </em>in the morning
then past noon , from 13 to 23 <em>(treize --> vingt-trois)</em> and "minuit<em> (midnight)</em>
<em />
☺☺☺
Here is your translation.. Carole met a lovely boy at the cafe.
Sylvain's vacation started yesterday morning.
I left my French book with a friend.
My best friend and I had a problem and we're not talking to each other anymore!
I spent a week in Paris.