"Qu'est-ce qu'elle prend pour faire ses courses ?" means "what does she takes to do her shopping" in English.
Assuming you want that translated into English, it's French for "at what time?"--"when?" in standard English.
To write "I can do the shopping" in plural form, you would say "Nous pouvons faire les courses" which translates to "We can do the shopping."
Faire in French is "to do" in English.
The direct translation from English to French of the nounshopping (synonym: purchasing) is courses.If you want to use the term in a phrase, the two most useful are faire les courses (to do the shopping) and aller faire les courses (to go shopping).
"To do well" in English is bien faire or faire bien in French.
Faire la cuisine means to cook in English.
Des trucs à faire is 'things to do, stuff to do' in English.
To shop in French is "faire du shopping." It literally means "to go shopping" or " to do the shopping."
People from Europe would say : Faire les courses, faire les magasins, faire du shoppingandFrench from Quebec, Canada would go : Magasiner
vous partez faire les courses
bonjour faire vous besoin a baiser
Pourrait faire plus... in French means "Could do better..." in English.