After I filled the answers I know, I immediately scrolled down to see if someone else made the connection. Why, oh, why am I not surprised? :) Alons-y, Alonso!
Why would you want to cheat? Isn't the object of taking the quiz to rest your knowledge and perhaps learn a thing or two? Cheating defeats that purpose somewhat, doesn't it?
Some of my research recently has involved French journals, so I've set my browser to automatically translate from French. I stared at the quiz for about 30 seconds trying to figure out what I'm supposed to be doing before it dawned on me what had happened.
judging by the comments in many, many comments sections, people don't see anything wrong with cheating... if i have one or two answers left, and no idea , even with 2 minutes spare i will give up...
S'il vous plait is more literally "if you please". That should be one of the answers. That is part of RSVP -- Repondez s'il vous plait. It didn't occur to me to just put "please".
I tried learning French at the beginning of the pandemic and I didn't get very far, but luckily most of these were covered in the first set of lessons. Did better than I expected.
combien ?
chamred would be: "charmed I´m shure"
Clearly I don't parlez vous Francais quite bon enough.
My best guess for "Je suis perdu" was "I am a chicken." Swing and a miss.
To be serious though, it is a great quiz.
If the object were an "it" then you'd be right: Je l'aime meaning "I like it."
To say "I like you," it's Je t'aime bien. To say "I love it," try Je l'adore.
It's a great quiz for practising everyday small talk. But could these be type-ins for dummies like me?