"Je suis bilingue" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I am bilingual."
Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "suis" means "(I) am." The feminine/masculine adjective "bilingue" means "bilingual."
The pronunciation is "zhuh swee bee-lehng."
Je suis bilingue.
Canada is an example of a bilingual nation, with English and French as its official languages.
She is bilingual, speaking both English and French fluently.
She is bilingual in English and Spanish, which allows her to communicate effectively with a wide range of people.
A person who learns French and English simultaneously from childhood onwards would be considered a simultaneous bilingual.
We're called Francophone, or bilingual (francophone/ bilingue in French).
Canada is an example of a bilingual nation, with English and French as its official languages.
She is bilingual, speaking both English and French fluently.
She is bilingual in English and Spanish, which allows her to communicate effectively with a wide range of people.
We're called Francophone, or bilingual (francophone/ bilingue in French).
His first language is English, but he's fluently bilingual in French as well.
Canada mostly
Bilingual. Canda is officially bilingual using French and English.
Yes, it is a bilingual country (French and English).
A Canadian who speaks both French and English is termed as bilingual or a Francophone.
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
Canada became a bilingual country because Canadians study both French and English in school.
The phrase "les deux" translates to "the two" in English.