"I studied French last year."
You would say "I studied French last year."
No, counting in French involves using French numbers consistently. Mixing French words with English numbers does not count as counting in French. To count in French, you need to use the French words for all the numbers in a sequence.
L'annee means - year {past tense, present tense, future tense} e.g. L'annee dernie're. meaning 'last year'
In the year 1066, Old English was the primary language spoken in England. Norman French was also used by the ruling elite after the Norman Conquest.
"year" is generally "an" (masc.) for a duration or an age, or "année" (fem.) for a date, although both can be interchanged at times.For instance, both "l'an dernier" or "l'année dernière" (last year) are common, but the latter is slightly more formal.
The months of the year translated from English to French are: January: janvier February: février March: mars April: avril May: mai June: juin July: juillet August: août September: septembre October: octobre November: novembre December: décembre
Spain and the U.S. (i am 100% sure ,i studied this last year)
last year - l'anno scorso
l'année dernière
"Le Nouvel An" in French is "the new year" in English.
Heureuse nouvelle année! in French means "Happy New Year!" in English.
1704
Mars is the third month of the year (March) in French.
Ya...It's King Abdullah...I studied it for school last year.
True. We studied them in geography last year.
The present tense is used to describe actions that are currently happening or habitually occur. The imperfect tense is used to describe ongoing or repeated actions in the past, or to set the scene in a narrative. In Spanish, for example, "yo como" (I eat) is present tense, while "yo comía" (I was eating/I used to eat) is imperfect tense.
No, it was a decade long event.
the french mustashe is from the carnival last year 2008 cool!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!