Put these words in the correct order as if this was a French sentence instead. (You do not have to translate the sentence).
a large, brown, kind old dog.
a large, old dog kind and brown.
spell the French word for 'good bye'
au revoir
Translate this:
C'est le seize mars, deux mille dix.
It's the 16th of March, 2010.
Name the four topics we covered this year in French
places in town, weather, food and clothing/body parts
Vrai ou faux: The French capitalise nationalities, days of the week or months of the year the same as English does.
Example: I do not work on Thursdays in April.
Faux!
e.g: janvier, mardi, australien
spell the French for 'today'.
aujourd'hui
Qu'est-ce que c'est 'une boulangerie' ?
a bakery
Name five French landmarks
too many to list...
Why is this sentence wrong?
J'ai deux pomme vert, et il y a une croissant dans ma poche.
The plurals and genders do not match!
J'ai deux pommes vertes et il y a un croissant dans ma poche.
spell the French word for "I can"
je peux
Qu'est-ce que c'est 'un chapeau' ?
a hat!
What is France's national motto?
liberté, egalité, fraternité
Explain what's wrong with this sentence?
J'aimer fais du shopping.
the verbs are conjugated the wrong way around.
J'aime faire du shopping.
spell the French for 'hair'
(les) cheveux
Qu'est-ce que c'est 'brouillard' ?
foggy/fog
Name four tips for speaking French correctly.
So many to choose from..
You have
I go
We do
He has
They (m) are
You (formal) go
She can
Tu as, je vais, nous faisons, il a, ils sont, vous allez, elle peut
spell the French for 80.
Qu'est-ce que c'est 'le petit dejeuner' ?
breakfast
True or False each sentence:
France is a bigger country than Australia.
France's flag is vertical stripes.
France has a bigger population than Australia.
Both France and Australia used to be reigned by a monarchy but have now abolished those.
FALSE we are huge
TRUE
TRUE
FALSE we are still in a Commonwealth.