"Saturday" in French is written as "samedi."
"last" is an adjective, and Saturday is a proper noun (always capitalized).
Yes, "last Saturday" is a prepositional phrase. It starts with the preposition "last" and is followed by the noun "Saturday," functioning as the object of the preposition.
It would be "Le samedi." However if you want to say next Saturday it would be "Le samedi prochain."
You would say "samedi prochain" in French to refer to next Saturday.
Saturday is 'samedi' in French.
Samedi is how you say Saturday in French.
"Saturday" in French is written as "samedi."
Saturday in french is samedi
Samdi=====Saturday
"qu'est-ce que vous (faites) samedi" means "what are you (doing) on Saturday?" in French.
"last" is an adjective, and Saturday is a proper noun (always capitalized).
Yes, there is a comma after "Last Saturday" if it is used at the beginning of a sentence or an introductory phrase. For example: "Last Saturday, we went to the park." However, if "Last Saturday" appears in the middle of a sentence, a comma may not be necessary.
Yes, "last Saturday" is a prepositional phrase. It starts with the preposition "last" and is followed by the noun "Saturday," functioning as the object of the preposition.
It would be "Le samedi." However if you want to say next Saturday it would be "Le samedi prochain."
samedi is Saturday; dimanche is Sunday. Days of the week are not capitalized in French.
You would say "samedi prochain" in French to refer to next Saturday.