This phrase means something that has been done and cannot be changed. It can also mean something that has already happened or accomplished.
I think you mean "fete accompli" and if so, it is from french, and it basically means "festival/celebration/event accomplished" Correct phrase is 'fait accompli' and translates, more or less, accomplished fact. Usage: By running away to be married, the two young people presented their parents with a 'fait accompli.' This is understood to mean 'NYAH nyah, can't touch this!
"J'ai fait." For example, 'I have done many good things' could be translated to "J'ai fait beaucoup de bonnes choses".
"Lui fait quelque chose" means "he/she does something to him/her" in French.
Quel temps mean 'what weather'. Usually Quel Temps is used in a sentence such as 'Quel temps fait-il' or 'Quel temps il fait'.
'It is good' or 'It is well'.
Fait accompli - something that has already been done and that you can't do anything about.
This phrase is actually derived from the French fait accompli. This means that there is something that has been done and cannot be undone.
The spelling is fait accompli, a "done thing".
Spelled "fait accompli", French for "accomplished fact"-- presumably irreversible. Also a "done deal." The January 2010 election of a Senate Republican committed to voting against the health care bill made the bill's defeat a fait accompli.
Fait accompli is a French phrase which means an accomplished fact, or an action that is presumably irreversible. Its first known recorded usage was in 1845.
"le fait de tomber amoureux de vous" reads 'the fact of falling in love with you' in French.
there has been a storm.
The correct term is 'fait accompli'. It means something which is completed, usually irrevocably. "He didn't wait his parents to sell the car, but it was a fait accompli"
I think you mean "fete accompli" and if so, it is from french, and it basically means "festival/celebration/event accomplished" Correct phrase is 'fait accompli' and translates, more or less, accomplished fact. Usage: By running away to be married, the two young people presented their parents with a 'fait accompli.' This is understood to mean 'NYAH nyah, can't touch this!
Voix de fait was created on 2006-02-28.
perhaps - c'est compliqué - it's complicated
'on fait un bonhomme de neige' means 'we build a snowman'