"Yes the words Ge Fanuc is written in both French and German. As of 2007 Ge Fanuc's ifix 4.0 has become available in German, French, Polish and Russian languages."
typically Italian but in French and German also... think of the origin of the composers
A portmanteau of French and German is sometimes called "Franglais" or "Französisch." It refers to a combination of words, phrases, or elements from both languages.
Mémé is a French equivalent of the German word Oma. The two feminine singular words translate as "gran," "grandma" or "granny" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "mey-mey" in French and "O-ma" in German.
Unlike Western languages like French, German, and English, Chinese does not have an alphabet. Written Chinese doesn't have letters that spell out words. Instead, it has characters that represent the different words of the language. The character for "open" is 開. In Simplified Chinese this is written 开.
C. S. Mohanavelu has written: 'German Tamilogy' -- subject(s): German, Foreign words and phrases, Tamil language, German language, Influence on Tamil
The letter 'w' is pronounced as 'double ve'. The letter comes from the non-French and non-Romance language words that add to French vocabularly. Many of the words are of German, English or Arabic origin.
Generally speaking, in English and French, numbers written out as words are written with hyphens, for example, thirty-eight, cinquante-sept (57), though in Spanish, numbers are written as separate words (38 translating into Spanish as treinta y ocho). In German, numbers between 13 and 99 are written as single words, for example, dreizehn (13), dreiundzwanzig (23), einunddreißig (31).
Nina Granada has written: 'French words and pictures' -- subject(s): French language, Glossaries, vocabularies
Spanish: terminado French: fini German: beendet Italian: finito
Spanish: estrella French: étoile German: Stern Italian: stella
Latin and German
Degree is generic and non-specific. French and German are specific.