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"all about me" is 'tout sur moi', or 'tout à propos de moi' in French.
amour conquiert tous
i actully dont know if you need help all you need to do is go on google translate. Just type in lamp and it shows up in french if you clcik french obviously you will work it out
In my house is an English equivalent of 'dans mamaison'. The preposition 'dans' means 'in'. The feminine possessive 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine noun 'maison' means 'house'. All together, they're pronounced 'daw mah meh-zohn'.
"Good night, my friends! You give me strength!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Bonne nuit, mes amis! Vous me donnez la force!Specifically, the feminine adjective bonne is "good". The feminine noun nuit means "night". The plural possessive adjective mes means "my". The masculine noun amis means "friends". The personal pronoun vous means "you all". The personal pronoun memeans the same in English and French. The feminine singular definite article lameans "the". The feminine noun force translates as "strength".The pronunciation will be "buh-nwee mey-zah-mee voo muh duh-ney lah fohrss" in French.
Feminine - La notation.Almost all, if not all, nouns that end in -ion are feminine in French.
The French word "la" is a feminine article used before feminine nouns.
There are multiple ways to say teacher in french. They most common is by saying professor. Masculine: Un Professeur Feminine: Une Prof Most non-proper nouns have a masculine and feminine in French and all adjectives have a masculine and feminine
tout
It means all, but afterwards there must be feminine.
"Intelligent" is a masculine adjective in French. The feminine form is "intelligente." The gender of the adjective changes depending on the noun it is describing.
Surrender, same as all the other words in French.
la Martinique is a French region, not a country. The noun is feminine.
"all about me" is 'tout sur moi', or 'tout à propos de moi' in French.
toute à toi
If all of them are female, then it's elles If even one of them is male, then ils
Both feminine and masculine genders exist in French.Specifically, all nouns exhibit either feminine or masculine gender. In addition, all adjectives have feminine or masculine forms. The past participles of verbs also will have feminine or masculine forms depending upon the gender of the speaker.