It comes before the adjective.
yes
In French, an adjective usually comes after the noun it describes. However, there are some irregular adjectives that come before the noun. Adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they modify.
It depends on if it is a BANGS adjective. bangs meaning- beauty,age,goodness,number,and size. these adjectifs(as the french would say) come AFTER the noun. all others meerly come before.
Petite is a French feminine adjective.
Well in french class they teach us to remember B.A.N.G.S. it stands for beauty, age, number, goodness and size. If the adjective falls under any of those category's (like grande or beau) then you put it before the noun. Every other time you write the adjective after the noun.
French is the English adjective that applies to the language, people and things of France. The word is almost always capitalized (one exception is french fries).Many words in English come from French, and many have retained their French spelling and/or pronunciation. The term for a man from France is Frenchman.
In English, adjectives come first but in french nouns come first so at the Olympics you may hear things like "Team Canada" or "Team USA" because so many people on Olympic committees are French speaking.
Sometimes, but not always. The article 'the' can precede an adjective or adverb that come before the noun.Examples:the housethe old house (adjective)the very old house (adverb + adjective)Mass (non-count) nouns, abstract noun, and gerunds (verbal nouns) usually don't use articles or determiners; words like oil, freedom, or swimming.See the link (related links log on the left column) for groups of determiners.
French adjectives generally follow their noun, and always agree with it in number and gender. Also, in adjectives that have different masculine and feminine forms and that generally precede their noun, like beau and belle, the masculine has two forms depending on the beginning of its noun: un beau jour, but un bel ouvrage.
Adjectives are used to describe a noun. They commonly come right before the noun that they are describing, though that is not always the case (i.e. predicate adjective and subject).
In language, the placement of adjectives before or after a noun can impact the meaning and emphasis in a sentence. In English, adjectives often come before the noun ("red apple"), while in other languages like Spanish and French, they often come after ("manzana roja" in Spanish). The placement of adjectives can affect the flow of sentences and the clarity of meaning, so it is important to consider the rules of adjective placement in each language.
Adjectives are words that modify (describe) a noun. In English they almost always go before the noun, but in French they usually go after the noun. Also, in French the adjective must always agree in gender and number with the noun it modifies. For example:Les enfants sages ont ramassé leurs jouets.The word "sages" is an adjective because it describes "enfants". (The words "les" and "leurs" are called determiners, which may or may not be considered adjectives, depending on whom you ask.)