Answer:
During the early Middle Ages, the oriflamme, the flag of Saint Denis, was used—red, with two, three, or five spikes. Originally, it was the royal banner under the Capetians. It was stored in Saint-Denis abbey, where it was taken when war broke out.
Explanation:
Salut !
Pour voir des peintures impressionistes on va en <em>Normandie.</em>
Stops oxygen-rich blood from reaching the brain and other organs. A person can die from SCA in minutes if it is not treated right away.
<h2>Bonjour</h2>
I wrote you down all the ways that seem logical to me, as a native French speaker
- Midi /or/ douze heure (12h00)
- Six heure et demi <u>du matin</u> (<u>AM</u>)
- Sept heure <u>du soir</u> (<u>PM)</u> /or/ dix-neuf heure (19h00)
- Huit heure quarante <u>du matin</u> (<u>AM</u>)
- Une heure <u>de l'après-midi</u> (<u>PM</u>) /or/ Treize heure (13h00)
- Deux heure quarante-cinq <u>du matin</u> (<u>AM</u>) /or/ Trois heure moins quart
- Trois heure trente-cinq <u>de l'après-midi</u> (<u>PM</u>) /or/ Quinze heure trente-cinq (15h35)
- Quatre heure vingt <u>du matin</u> (<u>AM</u>)
- Cinq heure <u>de l'après-midi</u> (<u>PM</u>) /or/ Dix-sept heure (17h00)
- Huit heure cinquante <u>du matin</u> <u>(AM</u>) /or/ Neuf-heure moins dix
<h2><u>Note</u></h2>
Note that "<u>du matin</u> (<u>AM</u>)"/"<u>de l'après-midi</u> (<u>PM</u>)"/"<u>du soir</u> (<u>PM)</u>" are optional, because in the majority of French-speaking countries (France, Belgium, Switzerland, Congo, Nige--ria (du-mb website censor a country name), Madagascar, etc.) the 24-hour system is more used, not PM/AM.
<h2>Bonne journée :)</h2>
Hello
It’s
Je ne veux pas te blesser (
I don’t want hurt you )
robe means dress
commander means order
coin means corner
blesser means hurt
Byye