Some French words have capital letters, but the rules for capitalizing words are different in French than in English. For example, "I live in Paris" is "J'habite à Paris," but "The language that I speak is French" is "La langue que je parle c'est français."
In French, capital letters are used at the beginning of sentences, proper nouns, and titles. French nouns are not capitalized unless they are at the beginning of a sentence or are proper nouns.
"WORDS" is a common noun that appears in all capital letters in the sentence.
No, because it is not a proper nou n.
the word vi (lowercase letters) doesn't mean anything in French. In capital letters, that stands for the Roman number '6'. Using these type of figures is common for kings.
The city that comes from the French words for "red stick" is Baton Rouge, which is the capital of Louisiana.
To say "in" in French, you can use the word "dans." For example, "in the house" would be "dans la maison."
Block letters are the same as CAPITAL letters.
NO
Usually capital letters in french aren't written with an accent (`). Now if you meant in cursive, it would look like a backwards 3.
In French, the use of all caps is not common in regular writing as it can be seen as shouting or rude. It is generally preferred to use proper punctuation and formatting to convey emphasis or importance in written communication.
No they don't require to be capitalized.
No, because it is not a proper nou n.
the word vi (lowercase letters) doesn't mean anything in French. In capital letters, that stands for the Roman number '6'. Using these type of figures is common for kings.
Baton Rouge is French for "red stick" and is the capital of Louisiana.
French spelling is Londres
To say "in" in French, you can use the word "dans." For example, "in the house" would be "dans la maison."
Fiji has four letters and its capital, Suva has four letters. :) Peru; capital is Lima Togo; capital is Lomé
Ranch, french, bench