answer the question in the same yhat you would answer "is it that..." in English. "Est-ce que" is not a complete question but calls for the object of the question. Est-ce que tu as garé la voiture ? is "did you park the car?" Est-ce que la voiture est garée ? is "is the car parked?" Est-ce que la voiture est bleue, ou est-ce qu'elle est rouge ? is "Is the car blue, or is it red?
Fortis est. (Or forte est, if the noun in question is neuter.)
Qui est...? in French is "Who is...?" in English.
La physique est-elle utile? is the inversion into a question of the French phrase La physique est utile. The question means "Is physics useful?" while the statement translates as "Physics is useful" in English. The pronunciation will be "la fee-seek ey-tel yoo-teel" in French.
The cast of Tout est question de fringues - 2006 includes: Ilona Georges
"Est-ce que" literally translates to "is it that". A question that begins with "est-ce que" should almost always be a yes or no answer.
Where is the cheese? = Où est le fromage ? The question; "can you tell me where the cheese is" = Est-ce que vous pouvez me dire où est-ce que le fromage est?
Peux-tu écrire une question ?
Qui est dans votre famille?
"est-ce que tu es..." means "are you...". Est-ce que is a very common question form, roughly meaning "is it". "Est-ce que tu es un garçon" would read "is it that you are a boy?" if we translated that literally.
"Quel jour est-ce?" is French for "What day is it?" It is a common question used to inquire about the current day of the week.
La Marseillaise (That was the answer to your question. The translation of your question is "What is the French National Anthem?")