--
John Nelson (Moderator), Essonne, France.
http://bienvenue.to/esf-website
http://bienvenue.to/esf-egroup
http://bienvenue.to/esf-chatroom
http://bienvenue.to/esf-webforum
Leyland_91 wrote:
> The friendship group for those that live, work or holiday in France.
> Le groupe amicale pour ceux qui vivre, travail ou passer leurs vacances en
> France.
>
> --
> John Nelson (Moderator), Essonne, France.
This is not a very convincing piece of advertising. If your links with France
are as close as you seem to want to suggest, you could at least get someone
who speaks the language to correct your French.
Warm regards
Peter
--
"A dust whom England bore. shaped, made aware" - Rupert Brooke - The Soldier
Peter J Lusby
p...@Lusby.org
http://www.lusby.org
Thanks in advance
Blue
Leyland_91 <leyla...@wanadoo.fr> wrote in message
news:94kf56$lar$3...@wanadoo.fr...
>Silly questions I know but wonder if someone can help.
>The three accent marks above the word / and \ and ^. What are they called
>in English, is one called a grav and if so what are the others called. I
>know they are for pronounciation.
Dunno, but the ^ upside down is called a hatcheck in Czech.
Dick J.
> The three accent marks above the word / and \ and ^. What are they called
> in English, is one called a grav and if so what are the others called.
acute (/), grave (\)(pronounced "grarve") and circumflex (^).
"J.Prescott" wrote:
> On Tue, 23 Jan 2001 10:58:19 -0800, Peter J Lusby <p...@lusby.org>
> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> >Leyland_91 wrote:
> >
> >> The friendship group for those that live, work or holiday in France.
> >> Le groupe amicale pour ceux qui vivre, travail ou passer leurs vacances en
> >> France.
> >>
> >> --
> >> John Nelson (Moderator), Essonne, France.
> >
> >This is not a very convincing piece of advertising. If your links with France
> >are as close as you seem to want to suggest, you could at least get someone
> >who speaks the language to correct your French.
>
> Perhaps he's trying to make the point that only the thoroughly
> unWocabised are welcome, or rather, bienvenir.
>
> Joanna
Perhaps so. Nevetheless I to think he should to know the difference between an
infinitive and a verb that to be conjugated, and to employ the correct one.
To regard warmly
"Leyland_91" <leyla...@wanadoo.fr> wrote in message
news:94kf56$lar$3...@wanadoo.fr...
appreciate it.
Blue
Peter J Lusby <p...@lusby.org> wrote in message
news:3A6F1EF0...@lusby.org...