The french noun for water is eau
Eau is a French noun whose spelling begins with the letters "ea." The feminine singular noun translates as "water" in English. The pronunciation will be "o" in French.
The noun for French is "Frenchman" for a male and "Frenchwoman" for a female.
Vue aquatique is a French equivalent of the English phrase "water view." The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun and adjective will be "vyoo a-kwa-teek" in French.
Sous l'eau is a French equivalent of the English phrase "under water." The pronunciation of the preposition, definite article, and feminine singular noun -- which translate literally as "under the water" -- will be "soo lo" in French.
"Miracle water" or "water of miracles" may be English equivalents of the French phrase eau des merveilles.Specifically, the feminine noun eau means "water." The preposition de means "of." The feminine noun merveilles means "miracles."The pronunciation will be "oh dey mehr-vey" in French.
French can be both a proper noun and a common noun. When referring to the French language or people, it is a proper noun, like when saying "He speaks French" or "She is French." However, when used as an adjective or to describe something related to France, it is a common noun, such as in "I love French food" or "We saw a French movie."
"The water" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase l'eau. The pronunciation of the feminine singular definite article and noun will be "lo" in French.
French is a proper adjective. France is a proper noun.
One French noun that starts with "w" is "wagon" which means "carriage" or "wagon" in English.
The French for "noun" is "nom". The French "non" is the English "no". Pronounciation for "non" and "nom" is the same.
The word "lentille" is a feminine noun in French.
Eau calme for the water body and eau plate for the non-carbonated drink are French equivalents of the English phrase "still water." The respective pronunciations of the feminine singular noun and adjective will be "o kalm" and "o plat" in French.