au is 'à le' put together (masculine) - it means to the or at the, à means to or at
"Au Royaume-Uni" French people often do not make any difference between United Kingdom and England so you can also say "En Angleterre" (In England).
'dans' means 'in' ex: dans un instant ... in one moment dans la maison... in the house 'au' means 'at' ex: au magasin... at the store au bon moment... at the right moment
au contraire :0))
"Bye" can be translated to "au revoir" in French.
Au Revoir. :)
Au chomage means out of work in French. There is no difference between 'un homme au chomage' (a man out of work) and 'une femme' (a woman) au chomage.
'au' is singular = à+le (and it's masculine), 'aux' is plural = à+les (it can be masculine or feminine)
one of them has a U after the A
"Au Royaume-Uni" French people often do not make any difference between United Kingdom and England so you can also say "En Angleterre" (In England).
'dans' means 'in' ex: dans un instant ... in one moment dans la maison... in the house 'au' means 'at' ex: au magasin... at the store au bon moment... at the right moment
au contraire :0))
"Bye" can be translated to "au revoir" in French.
Au Revoir. :)
None. It's au naturel and that's french.
Au revoir! in French is "Goodbye!" in English.
In at
In medicine, AU means in in both ears, UN means in both nostrils; in geography AU means Australia, while UN means United Nations.