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.
La physique est-elle futile
Mercredi il fait chaud is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Wednesday is hot."Specifically, the masculine noun mercredi means "Wednesday." The masculine pronoun ilmeans "he, it." The verb fait means "(he/she/it) does/makes, does do/make, is doing/making." The masculine adjective/adverb chaudmeans "hot."The pronunciation will be "mehr-kuh-dee eel feh shoh" in French.
This Word 'jeans' comes up from French phrase bleu de Gênes, literally the blue of Genoa.
No. A phenom is an enormously successful person and when that phrase replaces phenom in the question, it makes no sense.
See if you can phrase that question in the form of a complete sentence.
"A glue stick" and "one (1) glue stick" are English equivalents of the French phrase un bâton de colle. Regardless of meaning, the pronunciation remains "eh ba-to duh kuhl" in French.
demander means to ask in French and 'une question' is 'a question', but the phrase should be 'poser une question'. You may 'demander une réponse' (ask for an answer), but not a question.
Pas de question in French is "No question" if the speaker has nothing to ask and "No more questions?" if the phrase ends in a question mark in French.
"U r VEH-ree hend-suhm" is a way to say the English phrase "You are very handsome!" The phrase generally may be heard said to males or masculine animals. It tends to describe a physique, not a personality. * To ask for a translation of this phrase, you must specify a foreign language in the question itself.
"Phrase" is called "phrase" in French.
I'm quite confused.My school teacher tell us to use one inverted comma ('......') when it is inside two inverted commas ("......") only.He also tells us to NOT use it when writing the word/phrase is,here are two examples: Correct:The word is"happy". Wrong :The word is'happy'. But my tuition teacher tells us to use single inverted commas('.....') for word/phrase.Here are two examples: Correct:The phrase is'happy'. Wrong:The phrase is"happy". So I've no idea which teacher is correct =(
"At what...?" and "At which...?" are English equivalents of the incomplete French phrase À quelle...? The question also translates as "To what...?" or "To which...?" in English. The pronunciation will be "a kel" in French.
"No way!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Pas question! The adverb and feminine singular noun translate into English literally as "No question" in the sense of "Absolutely not (one word out of you)!" The pronunciation will be "pa keh-styo" in French.
No, and inverted triangle paragraph starts with the topic sentence. A triangle paragraph starts with the least important phrase and ends with the topic sentence.
Inverted commas, also known as quotation marks, are punctuation marks that appear as either " or ' around a word or phrase to indicate that it is being quoted or referenced.
"Does she have?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase A-t-elle? The question represents one of three ways of constructing interrogative sentences in French. The pronunciation will be "a-tel" in French.
"How so?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Comment ça? The question translates literally as "How that?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw sa" in French.
Nous ne devons pas....That's how you say 'we must not' in French...hope that answered your question! :)