Hi !!
Reinhold Messner è un alpinista molto famoso.
;)
It's eight o'clock in the morning 2 and Beatrice gets up. Beatrice is hungry and she is looking for food 3 in the kitchen 4. She is looking for cereals but there is no grain. She's looking for pancakes, but there are no pancakes. She seeks and seeks but she finds nothing to eat. Beatrice sits down and sighs. She is watching a program on TV. She does not eat anything. She watches fifty-six (56) programs on TV. Later 6 Beatrice looks at her watch. It is noon 7. Beatrice is always hungry. She goes to the kitchen and she looks for lunch 8. She is looking for pizza but there are no pizzas. She is looking for a hamburger, mail there is no burgers. She is looking for a sandwich, mail there are no sandwiches. There's nothing to eat! Beatrice sits down and cries. She cries for thirty-four (34) minutes. Finally, she decides to go fishing. She puts her fishing rod, hooks and bait in her car. She goes to the lake and she fishes for thirteen (13) minutes. She catches 10 sixty-nine (79) fish. She goes to her house with seventy-nine fish. She goes to the kitchen and prepares a sandwich and a pizza with the seventy-nine fish. She does not prepare hamburger with fish; that's weird! Beatrice eats and eats. How happy she is! Beatrice eats and eats. How happy she is! Beatrice eats and eats. How happy she is!
<em>Bonjour,</em>
Tu préfères
Conjugaison du verbe "préférer" au présent :
<em>je préfère</em>
<em>tu préfère</em>
<em>il,elle, on préfère</em>
<em>nous préférons</em>
<em>vous préférez</em>
<em>ils,elles préfèrent</em>
Answer:
Partitive articles are used both in English and in French to express quantities that cannot be counted. While the indefinite article (un, une, des) is used with countable quantities (un oeuf, deux oeufs, etc.), the partitive article is used before nouns that are indivisible or uncountable.
Explanation: