Answer:
I'll give you a sentence.
Explanation:
Ludwig vit en Allemagne. Il aime beaucoup étudier et il aime aussi lire. Il est très gentil et je l'ai rencontré la semaine dernière.
ENGLISH TRANSLATION:
Ludwig lives in Germany. He loves to study a lot, and he also likes to read. He is very nice and I met him just last week.
Answer:
> Voulez-vous qu'on aille manger de la pizza pour le déjeuner?
> Je prendrais une pizza avec des anchois et de la feta à partager version géante s'il vous plait.
> Elle est trop bonne cette pizza, les anchois changent vraiment tout au gout.
> C'était délicieux! On a vraiment passé un super moment!
Explanation:
1st : Invite
2nd : Place order taking pizza with anchovies and feta size giant
3rd : Saying that the pizza is so good and that anchovies change everything (put accent on u for gout)
4th : Leaving telling that it was delicious and a good time
Answer:
It translates to "where do you live?"
Explanation:
Answer:
a. êtes
Explanation:
Firstly, we need the correct verb that conjugates with "vous". This eliminates both avons and est. That leaves us with just "êtes" or "avez", which is quite tricky to differentiate which one to use. Thankfully, there is a special yet quite odd way to remember what verbs conjugate with etre. This pneumonic device is called "Dr. Mrs. P Vandertramp" if you're interested, but all you need to know is that rentrer is one of those words. Therefore, "êtes" is the correct verb missing from the sentence.
Answer:
An infinitive is formed from a verb but doesn't act as a verb. It acts as a noun, adjective, or adverb, and it is actually made up of two words: to + verb. These two words act together as a noun, adjective, or adverb. I love to swim.
Explanation:
Mark me as brainlist