Hi !!
Les <u>Britanniques</u> ont aboli l'esclavage.
Un marin <u>britannique </u>a trouvé l'ile.
(as an adjective, nationalyry names don't take a capital letter)
En République de Maurice, la langue officielle est <u>l'anglais</u> mais on parle <u>le
français</u> et <u>créole</u> aussi?
hope it helps :)
Bonjour
<em>Correct form of future tense</em>
<em />
À quelle heure arriverez-vous à l'arrêt du bus ?
ARRIVER <em>futur</em>
j'arriverai
tu arriveras
il/elle/on arrivera
nous arriverons
vous arriverez
ils/elles arriveront
<u>Future tense</u> ►
radical (root) of the verb ( examples => chant-er // fin-ir // dorm-ir)
<em>+ endings of tuture tense ►</em>
<em>ai / as / a / ons / ez / ont</em>
<em />
<em>☺☺☺</em>
Bonjour !!
Indicate the correct preposition <em>(partitive articles)</em>
1- du sucre
2- des pommes
3- de l'huile
4- de la salade
5- des petits pois
6- de la viande
7- du riz
8- de la farine
9- du pain
10- du beurre
To help you ==>
du, de la, de l', des are French partitive articles
<em>3 singular partitive articles</em>
du = masc. sing
de la = fem. sing
de l' = when the following noun begins with a vowel ar a mute 'h'
<em>only 1 plural</em>
des = both masculine and feminine
'de' just by itself isn't an article but a preposition and in this exercise, you've got to only find partitive articles..
example for 'de' as a preposition = c'est le chien<u> </u><u>de</u><u> </u>mon frère <em>(it's the dog </em><u><em>of </em></u><em>my brother)</em>
hope this will help :)
Answer:
sorry, all I know is that number 3 is true and number 4 is canal plus
Explanation:
I
Well they are different because in the u.s they call it subway if I'm right (I'm from the uk) also in France it's not underground like in the U.S. for the simalarties, they both use trains and I'm not sure of another. Hope this helped!