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Locality: Sainte-Julie, Quebec

Phone: +1 450-649-9190



Address: 24 borduas j3e2g7 Sainte-Julie, QC, Canada

Website: www.centrepl.com

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Centre de perfectionnement linguistique 26.02.2021

Quelques expressions anglaises : Avoir d'autres chats à fouetter! To have bigger fish to fry! Ex: I don't have time to help you paint your bedroom. I have bigger fish to fry!... Être plein aux as! (être très riche) To be loaded! Mark always buys expensive shoes because he is loaded!

Centre de perfectionnement linguistique 23.02.2021

Acheter en ligne. Très pratique oui mais saviez-vous que lorsqu'on retourne nos achats une grande partie se retrouve au dépotoir ou sont déchiquetés parce que cela coûte moins cher à Amazon?

Centre de perfectionnement linguistique 11.02.2021

In Titles: We Capitalize : Nouns (woman, bus, book) Adjectives (angry, lovely, big) Verbs (laugh, eat, run) Adverbs (slowly, smoothly, quietly)... Pronouns (he, she, you) Subordinating conjunctions (as, because, that) In Titles: We Do Not Capitalize: Articles: a, an, the Coordinating Conjunctions: and, but, or, for, nor, etc. Prepositions (fewer than five letters): on, at, to, from, by, etc

Centre de perfectionnement linguistique 27.01.2021

COMMON EXPRESSIONS AND IDIOMS: 1-A bag of bones (être très maigre ou n'avoir que la peu et les os) To say that someone is a bag of bones means that they are extremely thin. When he came home from the war he was a bag of bones. 2-To boil the ocean (perdre du temps précieux)... To boil the ocean means to waste time on a task or project that is unnecessary, not worth doing or impossible to achieve. I expect you to do the job well but don’t try to boil the ocean! 3-Face like thunder (avoir l'air très fâché) If someone has a face like thunder, they look very angry. When my brother is really angry, he has a face like thunder! 4-To make headway (progresser) If you make headway, you make progress in what you are trying to achieve. The police have made little headway in their search for the causes of the crime. See more

Centre de perfectionnement linguistique 11.01.2021

Lay or Lie? Lay is a transitive verb. It requires a direct subject and one or more objects. Its present tense is lay (e.g., I lay the pencil on the table) and its past tense is laid (e.g. Yesterday I laid the pencil on the table). Lie is an intransitive verb. It needs no object. Its present tense is lie (e.g., The Andes mountains lie between Chile and Argentina) and its past tense is lay (e.g., The man lay waiting for an ambulance). The most common mistake occurs when the writer uses the past tense of the transitive lay (e.g., I laid on the bed) when he/she actually means the intransitive past tense of lie" (e.g., I lay on the bed).