Yes,
people with Greek's origins.
You list them any way you like. You can refer to them by the names of the vertices ot their ends, or you can give them any other names.
singes.... monkeys
In French, "animal" is "animal," and there aren't any common animal names that start with "Y" in French.
any body with "LE" on the beginng
There are very few tree names that are feminine in French. Two of them are l'aubépine (the hawthorn) and l'yeuse (quercus ilex, the evergreen Holm oak / holly oak).
In French, they don't capitalize any months or days of the week. They are all lowercase.
avez-vous encore les noms des visiteurs
The French last name "Ségur" does not typically have the possessive form "Ségur'd." Instead, the possessive form would be "de Ségur," meaning "of Ségur." "De Ségur" is a common French surname that has historical roots and is still in use today.
"Sarah". Names don't change... "Bob" in America is still "Bob" in any other country.
what distinguishing characteristic is common in the names of saturated hydrocarbons?
Thomas, Clément, Louis, Maxime, Alexandre, Antoine, Paul, Jules, Valentin, Pierre...
Any number that ends with the digit 5 is divisible by 5.Any number that ends with the digit 5 is divisible by 5.Any number that ends with the digit 5 is divisible by 5.Any number that ends with the digit 5 is divisible by 5.