If you mean "faux pas," a social blunder or error, it means "step"--a false step.
"Paux" is not a word. The correct term is "faux pas," a French phrase meaning a social blunder or mistake, commonly used in English to describe an embarrassing or tactless error in social behavior or manners.
A faux pas is a mis-step, a mistake. It often refers to a social blunder.
fo pa
social error, misstep, blunder
I painted a faux marble finish on the pillars in front of my house and they look so real a neighbor ask how I could afford such an expensive decoration.
It is a French term derived from 'false step.'
un faux-pas (not a 'faux-paux') is a blunder or mistake. Literally it means 'wrong step'
A faux pas is a mis-step, a mistake. It often refers to a social blunder.
fo pa
A faux paux is a blunder or mistake. Most often you hear this term when a fashion mistake happens and shoes do not match bags or someone wears an unflattering outfit.
Deux means 'two', but 'paux' doesn't mean anything in French.
A tie on a short sleeve shirt does not look good. It would be a fashion faux paux.
No. Paux is a French word, which is not allowed in Scrabble.
social error, misstep, blunder
Nothing. In the phrase 'nez paux' the word 'nez' means 'nose'. Both it and the word 'paux' are misspellings, of 'n'est-ce pas?'. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'ne...pas' means 'not'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. And the demonstrative pronoun 'ce' means 'this'. The phrase therefore means Is this not [so]? And it may begin, or end, a question.
"Faux pas" is a French term. It means: gaffe/social blunder.
it's false / untrue
social error, misstep, blunder