An imperative sentence voices a command and a compound predicate is two or more predicates with the same subject. An imperative sentence using the word chic and a compound predicate is: You must be chic and have elegance!
pas beaucoup
Très basique.
tres seche
mon français est très limitée
C'est chic!
Chic
i dont know but you say chic for stylish in french
'très chic'
It is élégant, "elegant" came from french "élégant" , you can say: distingué, chic, gracieux
I'd say that French fashion is obviously more prestigious and chic.
An imperative sentence voices a command and a compound predicate is two or more predicates with the same subject. An imperative sentence using the word chic and a compound predicate is: You must be chic and have elegance!
"Sassy chic" in French can be translated to "chic impertinent" or "élégant impertinent."
No. "Vie" is a feminine word, so that's "la vie". "La vie chic" could be grammatically correct, in such expressions as 'elle voulait mener la vie chic des parisiennes' (she wanted to enjoy the chic life of the Parisians', but chic is barely used as an adjective, except in short, informal expressions: c'est chic, tu es chic (you're classy), etc...
You would probably say 'chic' or 'à la mode' (meaning, in the best style).
classe
cute.