Did you back up to your question about 3 pages ago about the subject (phares) and adjective agreement (cassés)?

Mme

I apologize, but as an AI text-based model, I do not have the ability to remember previous conversations or questions. However, I can provide a general explanation of subject-adjective agreement to help you understand the concept and apply it to sentences involving "phares" and "cassés".

In French, adjectives must agree in gender and number with the noun they modify. This means that the ending of the adjective changes based on the gender and number of the noun it describes.

For example, if the noun is masculine singular, the adjective should also be masculine singular. If the noun is feminine singular, the adjective should be feminine singular. If the noun is plural, the adjective should be plural as well.

In the case of "phares" and "cassés", the word "phares" is the plural form of the noun "phare" (headlight) in French. To match the plural form, the adjective "cassés" (broken) also needs to be plural. The masculine plural form of the adjective "cassés" is used because "phares" is a masculine plural noun.

So, in this case, the adjective agreement is "cassés" to match the plural noun "phares".