No. In English we say "How old are you?"
Elle a quinze ans is a French equivalent of the English phrases "She is 15 years old" and "She's 15 years old." The statement translates literally as "She has 15 years." The pronunciation will be "eh-la kehn-zaw" in French.
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
The word 'years' is plural, so it must be followed by 'are', not 'is'. 'The years are passing quickly now that I am old.' not 'The years is passing quickly now that I am old.' An example of the correct way to use the word years in a sentence is like this: Has the year passed? There are 365 days in a year. WOW! The years went fast!
No, that is not correct English grammar.The correct way to ask is either:"What is this a picture of?""What does this picture show?"
Yes, "gossiping" is correct.
Avere ... anni is an Italian equivalent of the incomplete phrase "years old." The number will be placed between the correct form of avere ("to have") and anni ("years [old]"). The pronunciation will be "a-VEY-rey AN-nee" in Pisan Italian.
This question does not make sense. Please correct your English so that the question is understandable.
The English language is about 1500-2000 years old. Modern English is somewhere between 300 and 400 years old--Shakespeare wrote in Early Modern English.
The correct grammar between 'an 8 year old' or an '8 years old child' is 'an 8 year old child'.
"I am 14 years old" in English is Ho quattordici anni in Italian.
8 years??!! correct answer is half of 8, that is orkut is 4 years old!
"She is 15 years old!" in English is Lei ha quindici anni! in Italian.
If my calculations are correct, you would be 114 years old.
Ho quindici anni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "I am 15 years old." The declaration translates literally as "I have 15 years" in English. The pronunciation will be "o KWEEN-dee-tchee AN-nee" in Pisan Italian.
i believe she is two years old if my calculations are correct.
The word we'll is a contraction for the prounoun 'we' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'will'. If the speaker and another person are both going to be five years old, then it is correct to say: We'll be five years old. (We will both be five years old.) If the speaker is referring to them self only or any other persons or things, it is correct to say: I will be five years old. You will be five years old. He will be five years old. She will be five years old. It will be five years old. They will be five years old.
Your answer is only about the name, so no. The mountain is 420 million years old