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Translation - Francuski-Engleski - Je vais à la mer. Je vais à la plage....
Current status
Translation
This text is available in the following languages:
Category
Daily life - Daily life
Ovaj prijevod zahtijeva "samo znacenje".
Title
Je vais à la mer. Je vais à la plage....
Text
Submitted by
beauty bird
Source language: Francuski
Je vais à la mer.
Je vais à la plage.
Je vais au musée.
Je vais au château.
Je vais au café - (je suis dans une ville inconnue et je veux aller dans un café où je ne suis jamais allée)
Remarks about the translation
préposition
Title
I go to the sea.I go to the beach.I go ...
Translation
Engleski
Translated by
soleil
Target language: Engleski
I go to the sea.
I go to the beach.
I go to the museum.
I go to the palace.
I go to the café - (I'm in a town, which I don't know, and I would prefer to go to a café where I have never been before)"
Validated by
lilian canale
- 1 April 2008 01:03
Last messages
Author
Message
31 March 2008 20:24
lilian canale
Number of messages: 14972
Hi soleil,
"I go to the caf
é
- (I'm in
a
town, which
I
don't know, and
I
would prefer to go to
a
caf
é
where
I
have never been before)"
English (like almost all languages) "borrows" some words from other languages. Some of these words change their spelling, but others keep something from the original word. Some French words used in English, for example, keep the written accent they have in French. That's the case of "café" "fiancé" "roué" etc
(You can yet choose "bar" instead.)
Also, the pronoun
I
has always to be written with a capital letter.
If you edit that I think we can set it into a poll. OK?
31 March 2008 23:39
soleil
Number of messages: 41
thn
I fixed)
About articles......i was always tought that article "the" is used as indefinite in the case if there is a qualifying conjunction after it, like in that case "I'm in THE town, WHICH I don't know", but it`s theory.......
31 March 2008 23:56
lilian canale
Number of messages: 14972
Hi soleil,
"je suis dans
une
ville inconnue et je veux aller dans
un
café où je ne suis jamais allée)"
the
is a definite article which identifies a particular noun. In this case the writer refers to
a
café.(any, not a specific one)
You can use that pair in a different sentence, for example:
I went to
the
café
which
is on the corner. (That is: there is a café on the corner, only one, so it is identified)
Do you understand what I mean?
1 April 2008 10:17
soleil
Number of messages: 41
ah, yes, thn