dépendre (usually followed by 'de')
The French Depend on crops to survive so they don't starve.
Most of the time, "buffet." It could depend on your context.
to plant = planter. The conjugation would depend on the context.
The fur trade
Depend the context: De luxe, luxurieux (food, hotel..), Chic (clothes)..
There are a lot of calories in french fries, as they are quite unhealthy. The amount of calories in the french fries depend on the type and make. I suggest that you check the packaging of the french fries, which should have the amount of calories on it :D
That would depend on the context.He is somewhat silly - Il est un peu (=a little) stupide.
this would depend on the gender of the cousin girl: ma cousine, boy: mon cousin
French people drink orange juice apple juice coffee and chocolate
The translation for 'pass' in French can depend on the context. It can be translated as "passer" or "Je passe" if referring to physically going past something, or as "réussir" or "obtenir" if referring to successfully completing a test or exam.
The answer will depend on which FFA you mean. It could be:Future Farmerss of America,French Athletics Federation (based on its name in French),French Forces in Germany (based on its name in French),Farmers for Action,Female Fat AdmirersFlorida Family Actionor some 60 other organisations or processes known as FFA.
You don't. The French don't have a concept for that. If you translated "poser" it comes out as "someone who poses" which would be a model, for example. Idioms typically don't translate well because they depend on cultural context.