Un matin bonne heure - 2006 was released on:
Netherlands: 1 February 2006 (International Film Festival Rotterdam)
USA: 26 May 2006 (Seattle International Film Festival)
Netherlands: 14 September 2006 (Africa in the Picture Film Festival)
Netherlands: 17 September 2006 (Amsterdam)
France: 23 November 2006 (Nantes Festival of 3 Continents)
Burkina Faso: 25 February 2007 (Ouagadougou Panafrican Film and Television Festival)
France: 23 May 2007 (Cannes Film Festival)
Un matin bonne heure - 2006 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:AL
The cast of Un matin bonne heure - 2006 includes: Mamoudou Camara as Yaguine Balamoussa Fofana as Tonton Bouba Ceydouba Koumbassa as Mohamed Mariam Sylla as Diaraye
Une heure du matin
'bonne matinée' = [have a] good morning 'de bon matin' = early in the morning ('bonne matin' is not grammatically correct) the common greetings are 'bonjour' (from the morning to the evening) and 'bonsoir' (meaning more specifically good evening). You can say 'bonne matinée' when you are leaving somebody in the morning, but not to greet the people when you meet them.
It means "What time do you have breakfast/eat in the morning?"
At what time must we get up tomorrow morning?
"A quelle heure vous levez-vous le matin?" (if it's someone older than you or someone you don't really know) If it's a friend or someone the same age or younger than yourself: "A quelle heure tu te lèves le matin?"
bon matin cherie, bonne journee
You don't say it in English or French, any "to" time is limited to a short number of minutes, not 50, which would be "it is 10 past 1AM" in English, or "il est une heure dix (du matin)" in French. There is no AM/PM in French since we usually use the 24-hour notation, so "une heure" means "1AM" and "treize heure" (13 hours) means "1PM". But "du matin" (in the morning) or "de l'après-midi" (in the afternoon) or "du soir" (in the evening) may be added in case the simpler 12-hour notation is used, if it may not be clear to the person what part of the day (or week) it is...
'Good morning' translated literally is 'bon matin,' but people in France don't actually use that term. They simply say "bonjour." 'Have a nice day' is "bonne journée."
le matin
MA Matin was born in 1981.