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Vocabulary Chapter 1.1

Terms

undefined, object
copy deck
C'est qui?
C'est Julie
Who is this?
This is Julie.
Elle est d'où?
Elle est de Nice?
She is from where?
She is from Nice.
Opposites-
petit - grand
blond - brun
le frère - la soeur
Opposites
small - large
blonde - brown
brother - sister
Qui est francais? - Paul est francais.
Who is French. - Paul is French
D'où est Julie? - Julie est de Paris.
Where is Julie from. - Julie is de Paris
Comment est Christophe? - Il est très amusant.
How is Chris? - He is very amusing.
Tu es d'où? - Je suis de S Lake Tahoe.
Where are you from? - I am from S. Lake Tahoe
Tu es élève dans une école américaine?
Oui, Je suis dans une école américaine.
Are you a student in an american school? Yes, I am in an american school
FEMININE
brune
petite
amusante
grande
Feminine usually end in (e)
brown
small
amusing
big
MASCULINE
brun
amusant
petit
grand
MASCULINE - usually does not end in e
brown
amusing
small
big
Il est ASSEZ amusant
Il est TRÈS amusant
Il est VRAIMENT amusant
He is FAIRLY amusing
He is VERY amusing
He is REALLY amusing
Masculine - Feminine Articles

un/une
le/la
Articles

un - masculine
une - feminine
le - masculine
la - feminine
energique and sympathique
these adjectives are both feminine and masculine
Making a sentence negative.

je NE suis PAS francais.
Put NE and PAS around the verb.
Paris, la capitale de la France
Paris is the capital of France.
Le lycée Henri IV à Paris est une école excellente.
The school Henri IV in Paris is an excellent school.
La Martinique est une île francaise dans la mer des Caraïbes.
Martinique is a french island in the Caribean Sea.
Lille, dans le nord, est une ville industrielle.
Lille, in the north, is an industrial city.
Marseille, dans le sud, est un port important sur la mer Mediterranee.
Marseille, in the south, is an important port near the Mediterranean Sea.

Deck Info

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