Le ski de fond in French is "cross-country skiing" in English.
après ski
Apres-Ski is French and means After skiing. It refers to going out, dancing, having drinks and socializing after skiing. It obviously doesn't have a location but simply happens where the ski resorts are located.
Rossignol, the maker of great ski equipment, has the French word for "nightingale" as its name.
Plume is pronounced "plewm". When pronouncing the French u, stick your lips out a little bit and try to make the sound very tight and at the front of your mouth. It's actually the same as the i vowel (as in ski) but with a rounded mouth shape rather than a smiling one.(plume is French for feather; the English word plume is panache in French.)
esqui = ski; esquiar = to ski
"Freestyle skiing" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ski acrobatique. The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "acrobatic skiing" in English. The pronunciation will be "skee a-kro-ba-teek" in Alsatian French.
"Ski jump" is an English equivalent of the French phrase saut à ski. The masculine singular phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular le since French employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(luh) so a skee" in Alsatian French.
Le ski de fond
I believe it's 'ski fond'.
"Door" is an English equivalent of the French word porte. The feminine singular noun also translates into English as "gate," "gateway," or "slalom gate" in such special contexts as airports and ski resorts. The pronunciation will be "port" in French.
sku means nothing in French. But ski is spelled the same way as in English.
le ski
après ski
enfants de ski
if you have a good ski like a seadoo or sumat stable then yeh but u will prolly get the french old bill on ya tail lol, i have a jet ski and if your looking for sumone to do it with? im game
"Dareka wo suki desu ka?"Pronunciation: dah-reh-kah oh ski dess kah?
une piste de ski