"Where is an ant's heart found?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Où se trouve le coeur d'une fourmi? The question also translates as "Where is the heart of one ant found?" in English. The pronunciation will be "oo suh troov luh kuhr dyoo foor-mee" in French.
Il se situe au niveau de l'abdomen, plutôt à l'arrière de son corps, derrière ses deux dernières pattes. Suis le lien pour plus de précision.
Où se trouve le parc? in French means "Where is the park?" in English.
Tête
dans la tete
dans le torse
Je le trouve vraiment drôle! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I find it really funny!" Except for the object pronoun before, not after, the verb, this is a case in which English and French sentence structure are similar. The pronunciation will be "zhuh luh troov vreh-maw drol" in French.
"What does she think about her courses?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Comment trouve-t-elle les matières? The pronunciation of the present indicative declaratory statement in the third person singular -- which translates literally as "How does she find the disciplines (materials, subject matter, subjects)?" -- will be "kuh-maw troov-tel ley ma-tyehr" in French.
"I find you..." is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase "Je te trouve... ."Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The object pronoun "te" means "(informal singular) you." The verb "trouve" means "(I) am finding, do find, find."The pronunciation is "zhuh tuh troov."
trouve les objets means "find the objects" in English.
I find them difficult in French is "Je les trouve difficiles."
"trouvez la question" means "find the question" in English.
Retrouvé
trouve