A debt paid is a friend kept / <span>Les bons comptes font les bons amis.
</span>
<span>A stitch in time saves nine / Mieux vaut prévenir que guérir .
</span>
<span>All is well that ends well / <span>Tout est bien qui finit bien.
</span></span>
<span>All work is honourable / <span>Il n'y a pas de sot métier.</span></span>
Answer:
Explanation:
First of all, the grammar in the first sentence is wrong. To put "jamais", you need to put "ne" before. So it should be like this: Moi, je ne __ jamais au basket.
Ok. Now the answer: Since "Je" is the 1st personne in singular form, and it is an "ER" verb (jouER), you will need a terminaison of "E".
So neither of the choices are good. It should be like this:
Moi, je ne joue jamais au basket.
For the second sentence, we use "on". It is the 3e personne in singular form, and it is an irregular verb (Aller; to go). So we won't rely on the "normal conjugation". So you'll need to memorize this verb by heart.
Ok. The conjugation for the verb "Aller" in 3e personne of singular form is "va".
So the choice should be like this:
Pour faire du shopping, on va au centre commercial.
Remember that "Vas" is the 2nd personne singular form of Aller (To go); and "Est" is the 3rd personne singular form of Etre (To be).
Answer: I live in a terraced house. On the ground floor there are four rooms.
Explanation:
The poplars in the fields of France
Are golden ladies come to dance;
But yet to see them there is none
But I and the September sun
The girl who in their shadow sits
Can only see the sock she knits;
Her dog is watching all the day
That not a cow shall go astray
The leisurely contented cows
Can only see the earth they browse;
Their piebald bodies through the grass
With busy, munching noses pass.
Alone the sun and I behold
Processions crowned with shining gold
The poplars in the fields of France
Like glorious ladies come to dance.
Poem about the fields in France!