French: Le français
English: l'anglais / Spanish: l'espagnol / German: l'allemand)
geography: la géographie
history: l'histoire
math: Les mathématiques (Les maths)
P.E.: l'éducation physique et sportive (EPS)?/Le sport
Biology: la biologie
chemistry: la chimie
physics: la physique
art: Le dessin
drama: Le théâtre
music: la musique
science: Les sciences
You learn French and then write the letter. Computers will translate language for you so you can do that too.
what subjects do you do / study
BonGO is french for crazy
You can write it like this: peindre.
In French mother is "Mere" or "Mama"
"Les subjets d'ecoles".
Les matières scolaires.
yes french is one of the main subjects their in the schools I know
"d'autres matières" means 'others matters / other (school) subjects' in French.
Well, to give you ideas about things to write about (when writing about your school) how about: - your teachers - the subjects you take - the subjects you like - the subjects you don't like - how you get to and from school - how far away you live from your school - what you do at break times - your favourite place to hang out at school - your favourite teacher - how often you have holidays - your friends at school - what time you start and finish school - what you wear to school - what you normally eat at break times - any school trips you have been on recently The list goes on...
French children have alot more lessons than us in school so they have a more boring day than us. But they study the same subjects we do.
school = école (pronounce ay-coll)
les matières que je préfère sont ... (the [school] subjects I prefer are...)
French, Mathematics, Physics and chemistry, English, Spanish, geography and history, pe, natural science, and music.
You learn French and then write the letter. Computers will translate language for you so you can do that too.
Des matières It is feminine and usually plural, not masculine.
Matières préférées is a French equivalent of the English phrase "favorite school subjects." The feminine plural phrase may be preceded immediately by the feminine plural les since French employs definite articles even when English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ley) ma-tyer prey-fey-rey" in French.