Suis un je garagiste
Pouvez-vous traduire les phrase suivantes au français s'il vous plaît?
This is not a very french thing. A frenchman could say j'adore les croissants, but probably wouldn't. The french idiom is : Moi, j'adore les croissants. Moi, j'adore St. Moritz ! Moi, j'adore le tour eiffel.
There are no sentences for this. Those are not words.
In Italian a translation is bello. Always remember that depending on the context of your sentences, the translation can vary. There may also be slang terminology if you were to travel to Italy. Keep in mind that online translators may not always be correct, they are a reflection of the exact words you have typed in.
Stevie Wonder = western video rearranged
you car were i by would i go
To teach reordering words to make sentences, you can start by providing examples of jumbled sentences and asking the learner to rearrange them in the correct order. You can also use sentence-building activities where students arrange words in order to form meaningful sentences. Providing feedback and guidance throughout the process will help reinforce the concept. Additionally, practicing with a variety of sentence structures and vocabulary will further enhance understanding.
Rearrange the order of sentences
which sentences?
A word scramble is a game where letters of a word are jumbled or mixed up, and you have to rearrange them to form the correct word. It's a fun way to challenge your vocabulary and problem-solving skills.
don't use online french translators for sentences. For words ok. But not sentences.
Of course! Please provide the French sentences you would like me to translate.
Go to each slot and check if it is possible to be in the first position. Choose any one of them according to your wish and see if you can make any sentence using that slot at the starting. Try to arrange some connection between different slots in a correct order. Arranging a jumbled sentence needs a lot of thinking and patience. Try to use your thinking power and be a little patient...I am sure you will get the answer.
Jumbled words are words, but the letters are mixed up.
je vais
"completez les phrases" = complete the sentences. ("completez" is a verb. A person or persons are being asked/told to complete the sentences)
Yes. It's a little unusual in sentences which are not questions, but English is pretty flexible and it's usually possible to rearrange sentences so that, for example, they start with very nearly whatever word you want, including 'which'. Which, if I remember properly, was your question.