For each question, choose from the options lettered A - E, the one that most appropriately completes the sentence.Voilà man parapluie et voila........ma sceur.
To find the correct word that completes the sentence "Voilà man parapluie et voilà........ma soeur," it is important to understand how demonstrative pronouns are used in French, especially in distinguishing gender and number.
The phrase "Voilà mon parapluie" translates to "There is my umbrella" and "Voilà............ma soeur" translates to "There is...........my sister."
The word "parapluie" (umbrella) is masculine, which is correctly complemented with "mon." The options are related to the second part of the sentence "Voilà...........ma soeur," which involves identifying the demonstrative pronoun correctly matching "ma soeur" (my sister).
Here is a simple breakdown:
1. Masculine Demonstrative Pronouns:
- celui - Used for singular masculine nouns.
2. Feminine Demonstrative Pronouns:
- celle - Used for singular feminine nouns.
- celle-là - Form of "celle" with emphasis: Used for singular feminine nouns, often to imply a distinction.
3. Plural Demonstrative Pronoun:
- celles - Used for plural feminine nouns.
Since "soeur" is feminine and singular, the correct demonstrative pronoun is "celle." Therefore, the sentence should be completed as "Voilà mon parapluie et voilà celle ma soeur," indicating "there is my umbrella and there is the one my sister."
In conclusion, the correct choice is "celle" because it is the singular feminine demonstrative pronoun that corresponds appropriately with "my sister."