Meeting you has been a pleasure.
Paul gave the flowers to Tom and me. Also, the first sentence makes no sense. Did you mean "the thirty fourth rule of grammar"?
Delight (noun) means great pleasure. The verb can mean to take pleasure in or to provide pleasure, to please or satisfy.
If someone says "it's been a pleasure talking to you," they mean "it was nice talking to you and I enjoyed it."
"au plaisir" is an elliptic form of the ornate sentence 'au plaisir de vous revoir' (looking forward with pleasure to meet you again)
The book is a concrete noun. The story it tells is an abstract noun.
with pleasure / my pleasure
gusto means pleasure e.g. me dió mucho gusto - it gave me lots of pleasure mucho gusto - pleased to meet you or if it is gustó then it means like e.g. me gustó la comida - I liked the food
Paul gave the flowers to Tom and me. Also, the first sentence makes no sense. Did you mean "the thirty fourth rule of grammar"?
The direct object is 'pen', which she gave to Alex. If Alex were the direct object, the phrase 'Jennifer gave Alex...' would mean that she gave Alex to someone or something.
Delight (noun) means great pleasure. The verb can mean to take pleasure in or to provide pleasure, to please or satisfy.
If someone says "it's been a pleasure talking to you," they mean "it was nice talking to you and I enjoyed it."
with pleasure
something that has no pleasure
If you mean "Ecstasy," it means excitement or pleasure.
"au plaisir" is an elliptic form of the ornate sentence 'au plaisir de vous revoir' (looking forward with pleasure to meet you again)
Un gusto means: a pleasure (as in: It's a pleasure to meet you)
The book is a concrete noun. The story it tells is an abstract noun.