an accent is 'un accent' in French
The word for "accent" in French is "accent."
One can say "peep" in French as "pioupiou" or "cui-cui."
The word "image" in French is pronounced with the emphasis on the second syllable, so it does not have an accent.
"Crazy" and "insane" can both be translated to "fou" in French.
No, the word "mum" in French does not have an acute accent. In French, "mum" is written as "maman" without any diacritical marks.
You can say "Je suis amΓ©ricain(e)" in French to mean "I am American."
you say it in a french accent
you say it as it is 'sierra' with a french accent
inséparables say inseparable but in a French accent
u say it "kenzie" with a french accent
it is the same in french but has a weird accent
it is the same in french but has a weird accent
You most likely say it 'Alexsandre', or Alexsander with a french accent. :)
he has a European accent. *the person means a french accent* He spoke French - is that an accent? He spoke French and had a french accent. Yes, french is an accent as well as a language. Example: If I say I have a french jacket, I mean that I have a jacket that is from France. When I mentioned that Monet had a french accent, I meant that he spoke french with the accent of someone who is from France, versus, let's say a French-Canadian, Haitian, Belgian accent, etc... An "European accent" doesn't really mean much because there is no such a thing as an European Language. Many languages are spoken in Europe, as well as multiple countries that speak french (France and Belgium) and the language that Monet spoke was French, with a french accent. Hope that sounds more clear now.
its the exact same spelling but with a french accent
wil i see you with a french accent
One can say "peep" in French as "pioupiou" or "cui-cui."
To is 'a' (with an accent facing downward on it) From is 'de'