"Je suis bilingue" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I am bilingual."
Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "suis" means "(I) am." The feminine/masculine adjective "bilingue" means "bilingual."
The pronunciation is "zhuh swee bee-lehng."
Canada is an example of a bilingual nation, with English and French as its official languages.
My friend is bilingual because he speaks both English and Spanish, fluently.
I am bilingual as I speak both English and French.
A person who learns French and English simultaneously from childhood onwards would be considered a simultaneous bilingual.
We're called Francophone, or bilingual (francophone/ bilingue in French).
Canada is an example of a bilingual nation, with English and French as its official languages.
My friend is bilingual because he speaks both English and Spanish, fluently.
I am bilingual as I speak both English and French.
A person who learns French and English simultaneously from childhood onwards would be considered a simultaneous bilingual.
We're called Francophone, or bilingual (francophone/ bilingue in French).
His first language is English, but he's fluently bilingual in French as well.
Canada mostly
Bilingual. Canda is officially bilingual using French and English.
Yes, it is a bilingual country (French and English).
A Canadian who speaks both French and English is termed as bilingual or a Francophone.
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
Canada became a bilingual country because Canadians study both French and English in school.