The French word 'bras' means 'arm' (body part) in English.
How d you say in french “i love you so much love I really need your hug
As in 'I have travelled to all parts of the globe', the word is 'terre'. As in 'a ball with the map of the earth on it', the word is 'terrestre'. As in 'an object shaped like a globe' the word is 'sphere'
The French satellite state during World War II was called Vichy France. It was established in 1940 after the German occupation of France and was led by Marshal Philippe Pétain.
The area claimed by the French would be labeled as 'B'.
Scone is pronounced like it rhymes with "own".
English: is it appropriate
**French:** est-ce approprié
(sounds like "essa proprer")
Prostate-specific antigen, or PSA, is a protein produced by the prostate gland that can be detected in the blood, either for screening purposes (to detect cancer before it causes symptoms) or, as in your case, to monitor a person who has already been treated for prostate cancer. There are many potential causes for a elevated PSA, but in the setting of prior prostate cancer, this must be the first consideration. This is because recurrent cancer may cause PSA levels to rise well before there is any other evidence of recurrence. By 'surgery', I presume you mean that you had a radical prostatectomy, or total removal of the prostate gland. If this is the case, the expectation would be that the PSA level falls to undetectable. The significance of a rise from 0.15 to 0.28 depends on several factors, including your baseline PSA after the surgery, the rate of increase (how quickly increases are occurring, and the trend of PSA levels (e.g. is it rising steadily, or does it go up and down). Additionally, more than one level is necessary before assigning any value to an increaesed PSA (i.e. your doctor should not be basing any treatment decisions on just one measurement; I presume you've had multiple PSA levels checked over the last two years). According to the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Clinical Practice Guidelines in Oncology for Prostate Cancer, treatment may be necessary if "their PSA level does not fall below the limits of detection after surgery or they have a detectable PSA level (> 0.3 ng/mL) that increases on two or more subsequent measurements after having no detectable PSA". Your specific PSA level is quite low, but it may be that the lab testing your blood has different cutoffs for detectable, normal etc...but the bigger question is whether your PSA is steadily increasing over time. Without knowing all the specifics of your history and bloodwork, I cannot definitively say whether or not retreatment is warranted, but it certainly seems reasonable that, in light of a steadily increasing PSA, your doctor is considering therapy.
In most languages that have grammatical gender, the word "table" is considered feminine.
In Cajun French, "cousin" is spelled and pronounced the same as in English.
Morgan in French is spelled "Morgan." It is the same spelling as in English.
In French, "house" is a masculine noun. The word for house is "maison" and it is preceded by the masculine definite article "le."
In languages with grammatical gender, the word "shirt" may be assigned either a masculine or feminine gender. For example, in Spanish, "shirt" is feminine (la camisa), while in French it is masculine (le chemise).
Iraq is masculine in French, so it would be "l'Irak" as opposed to "l'Irakie" if it were feminine.
The word "ours" is not specifically masculine or feminine; it is a possessive pronoun that indicates ownership. It can be used for both masculine and feminine nouns.
The French word for a laid back attitude is "décontracté."
The French word for boots, "bottes", is feminine.
Jean Vanier is pronounced in French as "zhahn vahn-yay."
In French, "school registration" is translated as "inscription scolaire."