Bonjour,
1. pour/de/à/au
2. de/de
3. l'/de/
4. d'/en/en/en/sous
5. à/de/dans/à
6. Dès/avec/de/en/des/en/à
7. à/toutes/sur/de la
8. en/mon/à
9. bien/de
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:
Answer:
(ready) to work. She is very
1. Mélanie is a lawyer. She is always (active)
(Foreigner): He is English. His French actress
2. Her husband Jeff, is an engineer. It is
(favorite) is Marion Cotillard, (crazy). This is
3. My classmates, Jean-Philippe and Sofiane, are
(annoying).
4. Jean-Philippe's wife is very
Jealous). This is (sad)
(Lazy). It's a man
5. The waiter at my favorite restaurant is not
(worker)
6. Neighbor's dogs are (nasty) and (flood)
great, but it gives a lot of reviews. This is
7. My literature teacher is annoying
8. My hairdresser is very
(nice and modest)
Explanation:
I don't know what you want me to do. Hope this helps
"je t'aime" is the French translation
Answer:
Bonjour,
L’appartement a de très (grand) ___grandes____ fenêtres et une (bon) __bonne____ hauteur sous plafond.
Explanation:
grand s'accorde au féminin pluriel de fenêtres
bonne s'accorde au féminin de hauteur