You say "J'ai acheté des bonbons" in French. "J'ai" means "I have," "acheté" means "bought," and "des bonbons" translates to "some sweets" or "candies."
La maison de Doux.
... which means that I rarely eat sweets' is translated '... ce qui veut dire que je mange rarement des bonbons' in French.
Yes, "un bonbon" is correct in French. It translates to "a candy" in English.
It depends on the type of "sweets" you're eating. Read the labels. Some ingredients don't say, "sugar." They usually say: glucose, fructose, etc.
'rare' is the maori word for sweets.
Tu as acheté beaucoup de choses
"Ne mange pas de bonbons." "Ne mangez pas de bonbons." (formal)
bonbon but i would spell it like bombon because thats how the french should spell it
To say "give me some" in French, you can say "donne-moi en."
sweeties
Godis.
She was forced into it. Some say it was because she was "bought" and some say it is because she was "won."