"what I meant to say" is 'ce que je voulais dire, ...' in French.
"j'en pense chaque mot"
To answer "I know what it meant" in French, you can say "Je sais ce que cela voulait dire."
Do you mean "How do you say 'my name is' in French?" ? If that is what you meant, then a literal translation is "mon nom est (your name here)". More commonly, though, people would say "Je m'appelle (your name here)". The latter translates to something closer to "I am called ..."
François is a French first name. In old French, it meant 'French'.
1964
il est prédestiné
If you meant medal, it's médaille
sorry I meant to say why did the french have such a good relationship with the first nation in Canada
"cloi" does not exist in English or French. If you meant "What does 'quoi' mean in English?", "quoi" is "what".
"j'en pense chaque mot"
To answer "I know what it meant" in French, you can say "Je sais ce que cela voulait dire."
lanternes If you meant something like a source of light in a glass compartiment.
It's 'bonjour,' assuming you meant 'hello.' Otherwise, it would probably be 'bonjoour.'
Comment allez vous? (how are you) Or if you meant to translate "what did the doctor say", it is " Qu'est-ce que le docteur a dit?"
in old French 'franc' meant 'free'in old French 'franc' meant 'free'
A piano is spelled the same in French. It is a masculine noun.
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