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funny
Tu n'es pas rigolo
c'est drole, c'est marant/amusant/rigolo
Le français c'est amusant, le français, c'est rigolo.
funny joke rigoleux, marrant funny man rigolo, marrant funny peculiar man un peu special funny peculiar thing bizarre, extra-ordinaire
Very fun! There I said it How about in a few other languages? rigolo diversió забавление kesenangan Those mean fun, and now for very fun vrlo zabavan tunay na saya veldig moro очень весело
The only normal "truly French" word I can think of that ends in o is rigolo. There is also zoo, alto, ratio.There are also many informal or slang words that end in o, many of which are abbreviations of longer words; for example, ado, perso, diapo, homo, accro, dodo.
The french word for fun is Amusant(e).Amusant can be masculine or feminine so you should put an e if you are a girl and leave it Amusant if you are a boy. Amusant also means funny.
je suis...amusantcomiquedrôlerigolomarrantThe last two are informal.If you're a girl, amusant becomes amusante , rigolo rigolote, and marrant marrante (with the final T's pronounced).
Tullio Pericoli has written: 'Tanti saluti' 'Dreamscapes of Tullio Pericoli' 'Il dottor Rigolo' 'Tutti da Fulvia sabato sera' 'Dreamscapes' -- subject(s): Catalogs, Italian Painting, Painting, Italian 'Colti nel segno' -- subject(s): Artists, Caricatures and cartoons, Celebrities, Italian wit and humor, Pictorial, Pictorial Italian wit and humor 'Identikit di illustri conosciuti'
The cast of Les saltimbanques - 1930 includes: Marthe Ferrare as Elida Suzanne Gouts as Marion Max Hansen as Max Otto Hartmann as Armand Nicolas Koline as Rigolo, Clown Nastia Latka as Daisy, seine Tochter Georges Melchior as Bankier d"Herbes Anni Nowerowskaja as Suzanne als Kind Louis Ralph as Malicorne, Zirkusdirektor Hermine Sterler as Stella Daniela
Amusant (drôle, marrant, rigolo) in the masculine and amusante (drôle, marrante, rigolote) in the feminine are French equivalents of the English word "funny." Context makes clear whether the choice is feminine or masculine gender-driven and formal or -- regarding the words between parentheses -- informal. The respective pronunciations will be "a-myoo-zaw (drol, mar-raw, ree-go-lo)" in the masculine and "a-myoo-zawnte (drol, mar-rawnt, ree-go-lot)" in the feminine in French.