You are visiting the French West Indies. What can you NOT do there?
D. Visit Disney Caribbean.
The answer is the last option provided: "Je l'aime"
<u>EXPLANATION</u>: the first option is not grammatically correct because the "le" is wrongly placed. The second option uses the plural pronoun "les" whereas the sentence features a singular noun, "le hockey," so that can't be right. And finally, the third option is also wrong, because it uses a feminine pronoun "la" when in the sentence the noun is masculine "LE hockey." Moreover, the third option would require an apostrophe because of the two vowels ("a") next to each other.
This only leaves the last option listed as correct.
Answer:
Words that look alike: <em>a </em>means <em>have</em><em>,</em><em> </em><em>à </em>means <em>to.</em><em> </em><em>où </em>means where, <em>ou</em><em> </em>means or.
The title might be <em>Accent </em><em>Grave </em>because the teacher is trying to be serious about conjugating the verb, <em>être,</em> while Hamlet is being serious about the meaning of <u>where</u> we are in life-- or in daydreams-- , and the meaning of <u>choices</u> as <em>"</em><em>to </em><em>be </em><em><u>or</u></em><em> </em><em>not</em><em> </em><em>to </em><em>be.</em><em> </em><em>.</em><em> </em><em>.</em><em>"</em><em> </em>
That is an allusion to Hamlet's famous soliloquy in the play by Shakespeare.
The title is a pun. In French, grave means "serious" but it is also the accent mark that differentiates <em>ou </em>from où. In English, <em>grave </em>has different meanings, sharing the "serious" definition with the French, but also meaning the excavation where a dead body is buried.
This may be an allusion to the scene in Act V where Hamlet and Laertes fight in the newly-dug grave of Ophelia about their love for her.
Salut:
Camille a deux animaux
Simon a 15 jeux
Fatima et Mina ont 17 dessins
M. Coulon a 3 tableaux
Ludovic et Yann ont 30 crayons
Gaëlle a 27 journaux