In order to fully bake the baguette, I had to add another briquette to the fire.
The word for "wand" in French is baguette. The spelling is the same in French as it is known in common English. If you are trying to spell "magic wand", the spelling is very similar as it is: une baguette magique.
Baguette - the same as the French bread.
Yes, the word "being" is used correctly in the sentence "the same procedure currently being used." It is used as a present participle to indicate that the procedure is currently in progress or ongoing.
No, "homonym" is not used correctly in this sentence. A homonym is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning, such as "blue" (color) and "blew" (past tense of blow). In the given sentence, there are no homonyms used.
When It Seems That You Haven't Retype The Same Password As The Others
Homophone; the two words are pronounced the same but have different meanings and sometimes different spellings
Chat (cat) Bonjour (hello) Café (cafe) Restaurant (restaurant) Baguette (baguette)
Yes, the 2.2 Carat Trillium Baguette Diamond Engagement Ring is lighter than gold besides white gold.
"baguette" is pronounced like "bag heyte". "bagget" does not exist in English, it is spelled and pronounced the same as in French, since it is a French name originally.
Yes both words have same meaning!
Generally a descriptive word meaning "rod" or "stick" or "club", usually used together in a phrase, such as the following: baguette magique: magic wand baguette de tambour: drumstick baguettes: chopsticks *We have generally come to think of baguette to mean a long, slender loaf of French or French-style bread...another usage is in the cut of precious gemstones. Diamonds, emeralds and sapphires to name a few are cut in a rectangular shape called baguettes. fusée à baguette: rocket or rocketship
Ex. Homo: Same