The plural of "the school" in French is "les écoles."
The plural form of "roux" is "roux." The word "roux" is originally from French, and it remains the same in its plural form.
The plural of "bonjour" in French is "bonjours."
The plural of "agréable" in French is "agréables."
A sister is "une soeur" in French. The plural is "des soeurs".
The plural of "objet" in French is "objets."
les toilettes (used in the plural)
The plural form of "roux" is "roux." The word "roux" is originally from French, and it remains the same in its plural form.
bananeune banane, plural: des bananes
French homework is "devoirs de français". Devoirs is usually plural, but is is also possible to use it as a singular.
school = école (pronounce ay-coll)
national (masculine singular) nationale (feminine singular) nationaux (masculine plural) nationales (feminine plural)
I'd start by writing in French, not trying to write in English and translate.Start by saying what school you go to. Then tell where the school is. Then talk about what kinds of students there are and what you learn. Then say if you like the school or not. That would be a good paragraph.
Comment décrire mon école?
[object Object]
écrire is the verb "to write"It is a regular -re verb and so the present tense conjugation goes like this:j'écris - I am writing ~ I write ~ I do writetu écris - You are writing ~ You write ~ You do writeil/elle écrit - He/she is writing ~ He/she writes ~ He/she does writenous écrivons - We are writing ~ We write ~ We do writevous écrivez - You (plural) are writing ~ You (plural) write ~ You (plural) do writeils/elles écrivent - They are writing ~ They write ~ They do write
Q-tips and cotton buds are called "des cotons-tiges" (plural - the singular is "un coton-tige") in French.
Write-offs is the plural of write-off