Answer:
1. bien sur que j’aime bien voyager.
2. Pas du tout, je n’aime pas les examens.
3. bien sûr, la physique c'est facile
4. peut-être bien que je le suis.
5. bien sûr, j'étudie avec mes copains.
I haven't taken French in a while so I'm a little rusty.
Number one should translate to something about putting the princess to sleep; so thus it is "potion magique".
Number two, it's talking about someone using a wand to "transforme" the pumpkin into a carriage.
Number three, is talking about the characters being personified in a "fable".
Number four is simple of course, it being "princesse".
Number five, this is just a lucky guess; I only figure that "fantôme" could translate to phantom.
Number six is "morale".
Number seven is "lègende".
Number eight is "combat".
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Hello
2. Ce sont les papiers des étudiants
Byye
Well, this is not an easy question, as it's hard to say what " practically noone" means.
In Cote D'Ivore, most people are either Muslim or Christian, so it's definitely true that most people are not practicing traditional religions.
However, an estimated 3-10 percent of the population still practices traditional religions and some fuse elements of traditional religions with Christianity or Islam.
So I would judge the statement as "false" that "practically noone" - since some people do!
When you learn a language, you start with basic sentences with the most common word order. In French, this is SVO - Subject + Verb + Object. As for most Romance languages - and, indeed, English - the subject (who is doing the action?) generally comes at the beginning of the sentence.