une disquette et la disquette
to correct = corregir
correggere is the Italian word for correct
The answers to the online math exercises is an English equivalent of 'les corrigés des exercices de maths enligne'. The plural definite article 'les' means 'the'. The masculine noun 'corrigés' means 'answer book, answers, correct versions'. The word 'des' combines the preposition 'de' with 'les' to mean 'of the'. The masculine noun 'exercices' means 'exercises'. The feminine noun 'maths' means 'math'. The preposition 'en' means 'in, on'. The feminine noun 'ligne' means 'line'. All together, they're pronounced 'leh koh-ree-zheh deh-zeh-ksehr-sees duh maht aw lee-nyuh'.
== == Well, it means 'All, then', which you will agree means nothing at all. What you've probably heard is 'Zut alors', which means 'Oh, bother', or 'dearie me' or possibly something a little stronger. Or you may have heard 'À tout à l'heure', which is roughly translated 'see you soon'. It basically means see you later.
"Todos los dias"= (Literally "All the days"), most commonly it means "every day" "Todos la dias" is not correct grammar. "Día" is a masculine word. Dias is plural so the article (el, not la) has to be plural as well.
The correct pair of definite and indefinite articles for the word "disquette" is "la" for the definite article and "une" for the indefinite article in French.
The correct indefinite article for the noun "bottes" is "des" in French.
The correct indefinite article is a chemise.The indefinite article 'a' is used before a word beginning with a consonant sound. The noun 'chemise' begins with a consonant sound (ch).The indefinite article 'an' is used before a word beginning with a vowel sound, for example an indigochemise.
The correct indefinite article for "boligrafos" is "unos," which means "some" or "a few" in English.
Thank you lord for a safe travel or thank you lord for the safe travel are all correct. The use of "the" is definite article while for "a" is for indefinite article.
That would be une!
The correct usage is "a ewe."
Yes, darkness is a noun and the indefinite article 'a' is grammatically correct. It would also be correct to use the definite article 'the', depending on how the word darkness is used. Examples:A darkness invaded my thoughts. A darkness dominated the story.The darkness made it difficult to read the text. The darkness of the stairwell made it necessary to take care.
none because theres no lo
It depends on whether the student (élève is student) is a male student or a female student. For example: the good male student - le bon élève AND the good female student - la bonne élève. Of course, if there is nothing to separate élève from the article, the article contracts to l', leading to l'élève.
Madrina is an Italian equivalent of the English word "godmother".Specifically, the word is a feminine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine singular indefinite article una("a"). The pronunciation will be "ma-DREE-na" in Italian.
A unit. An is the original form of the indefinite article, but the n is dropped before a word beginning with a consonant. The word unit begins with a consonant sound (the y-glide), and therefore it takes the indefinite article a without the n.