In order to indicate how to answer it, one would need the full sentence.
The correct phrasing would be "Il n'est le . . . pas"
"Il n'est le . . . pas." means "He/it is not the . . . "
For example:
"Martin Scorsese, il n'est pas le realisateur du film Titanic."
"Martin Scorsese isn't the director of the movie Titanic."
I hope this helps.
Ta commande est passée means your invoice is put in
There are three syllables: ear-li-est.
"Est-ce que" is an extremely common feature in French. It serves to put your phrase in question form. English speakers can use 'did' in similar situations: Did he see ...? > Est-ce qu'il a vu ... ? In the French phrase, the verb will be in the past tense. Est-ce que can also stand for "do/does" when the French verb is in the present tense: Does he go to his car? > Est-ce qu'il va à sa voiture ?
Eastern Standard Time it means that in its own right, but also as a suffix, as an example, small might mean little in size, but smallest is the most small of them all. Big is large, but biggest may be the most big of them all. To put this in its gramatical form, it forms the superlative degree of adjectives and adverbs, as quoted above, smallest, biggest or fastest or slowest
They will respond with an increased out put of urine.
On y est.
You mean 3/5? Well, 3/5 is already in simplest form...
If you mean 200/3206 then it is 100/1603 as a fraction in its simplest form
he put them in labor camps
The present form of "put" is "put."
Interest is divided into syllables like this: in-ter-est.
When you fill in a form - tick the box/ put a tick or a cross in the box indicated.