Je suis de... is the answer to the French question D'où es-tu? The question and the response respectively translate literally as "Where are you from?" and "I'm from...," as in Je suis des États-Unis ("I'm from the United States"), in English. The respective pronunciations will be "doo ey-tyoo" for the question and "zhuh swee dey-zey-ta-zyoo-nee" for the response in Alsatian French.
For a guy/boy it is curieux for a girl it is curieuse
question There are no accents.
Just as you did in your question according to google translate :)
The question isn't correct. Its supposed to be Good evening son. In french: Bonsoir mon fils.
point d'interrogation
Estu Ernesto has written: 'Menerjang batas'
Estu Widodo has written: 'Model pendidikan multikultural dengan pendekatan cooperative learning menuju sistem pendidikan yang demokratis'
ebecause eyou eare estu epid
The origin of a question which means to ask about a topic is French. The French origin was question, old French question.
The word "question" in French is feminine. It is "une question."
Pas de question in French is "No question" if the speaker has nothing to ask and "No more questions?" if the phrase ends in a question mark in French.
Poser une question in French is "to pose a question" in English.
Pas question
question suivante ?
Deuxième question.
The corvette is anything BUT french so to answer your question, NO
A French question mark is called "point d'interrogation."