The correct definite article for the French word "papier" is "le." Therefore, it is "le papier," which means "the paper" in English.
The correct pair of definite and indefinite articles for the word "disquette" is "la" for the definite article and "une" for the indefinite article in French.
No. Servicing is singular, and takes the singular verb "falls;" and "following items" needs the definite article.
none because theres no lo
une disquette et la disquette
It depends on whether the student (élève is student) is a male student or a female student. For example: the good male student - le bon élève AND the good female student - la bonne élève. Of course, if there is nothing to separate élève from the article, the article contracts to l', leading to l'élève.
Le is the correct article to place before the French word mot.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article lemeans "the." The masculine noun mot means "word." The pronunciation is "luh moh."
No, the noun craziness does not use the definite article 'the'; corrected sentence: The world is full of craziness.
If a tried, tested and definite procedure is carefully followed, the decision finally reached, would be expected to be the correct one.
It needs a definite article at the beginning: "The opening of Victoria Mall will be moved to September 30."
Thank you lord for a safe travel or thank you lord for the safe travel are all correct. The use of "the" is definite article while for "a" is for indefinite article.
Yes, darkness is a noun and the indefinite article 'a' is grammatically correct. It would also be correct to use the definite article 'the', depending on how the word darkness is used. Examples:A darkness invaded my thoughts. A darkness dominated the story.The darkness made it difficult to read the text. The darkness of the stairwell made it necessary to take care.