Jacob took a french class at the university of Arkansas in the fall.
Jacob took a french class at the university of Arkansas in the fall.
Jacob took a French class at the University of Arkansas in the fall.
Jacob took a French class at the University of Arkansas in the fall.
I would change it to "last fall": Jacob took a French class at the University of Arkansas last fall. The phrase "in the fall" suggests the future. For example, you might say, "I'm going to Greece in the fall." If you'd already gone to Greece, you'd say, "I went to Greece last fall." You wouldn't say, "I went to Greece in the fall" unless you were including the year you'd gone: "I went to Greece in the fall of 1992." Other than that, it's fine. Except for the lack of capitalization, of course.
Who is your favorite French artist with a question mark at the end
The only thing I see is "she" should be capitalized, but as far as I understand, French, Greek and Madison College are properly capitalized.
North is spelled 'le nord' (no capitalization needed) in French.
Arkansas is a French pronunciation of the Quapaw word "akakaze", meaning "land of downriver people" or the same Sioux word meaning "people of the south wind". It is pronounced ar-can-saw.
'Yale University in French'
The French word for 'correct' is 'corriger.'
Café de l'amour. In French, one doesn't capitalize all the words as one does in English.
You should write French with a capital letter, so French restaurant is correct.
French University in Egypt was created in 2002.
The origin of the word "Arkansas" is derived from a French interpretation of a Sioux word "acansa" which means "downstream place" or "land of the downriver people". It was first used by French explorers in the 17th century to refer to a specific Native American tribe, and later came to be associated with the region encompassing the present-day U.S. state of Arkansas.