The English word mutton (meaning sheepmeat) comes from the French word 'mouton' which means a sheep (so it can mean the animal as well as the meat). So a mutton chop in French is 'une côte de mouton'. We often use the diminutive 'côtelette' which is translated in English as cutlet - for example 'une côtelette de porc, d'agneau' for a pork chop or a lamb cutlet.
le français (masculine article, plus masculine noun / or adjective) - la française (feminine article plus feminine noun / or adjective)
J'étudie plus de français après mon examen: I'll study more french after my examination
A declaration is an incomplete type whereas a definition is a complete type.
I doesn't mean anything the beginning mean: nor the french language the end: please
la la land
Three dollars in good shape
The term "4.23 plus 16.21" matches with definition A) 26.09. The term "42.3 plus 1.621" matches with definition B) 43.921. The term "4.23 and minus 1.621" matches with definition C) 20.44. The term "42.3 and minus 16.21" matches with definition D.
Speed plus the direction of travel.
it is symmetric
It's not really a question and is not grammatically correct. It says, "I've lost a lot of French that I speak right now?"
it is where A plus B= B+a
Depends on whether you chop a lot of onions! For most people, a good food processor with a variety of blades will do the same job, plus much more. My opinion is that you have to chop a lot of onions every day to justify buying something specifically made to only chop onions.