"Une douzaine" means "a dozen" in French. Example: Une douzaine d'oeufs= a dozen eggs
A dozen in French is "une douzaine."
To say "French assignment" in French, you can say "devoir de français."
You say "j'aime le français" to say "I love French" in French.
"Ouch" in French is "Aïe".
You can say "we will" in French by using the phrase "nous allons."
"Quand" is how you say "when" in French.
twelve is "douze" in French and a dozen is 'une douzaine".
Ten is 'dix' in French. A ten of something (like you would say a dozen of sth) is 'une dizaine'.
The number 12 is douze in French. That's where English got the word dozen.
A dozen = 12. The word comes from the old French word douzaine which means "a group of twelve".
medieval french & indirectly latin
Dozen actually represents the quantity but not currency. So there is not a valid relation between dozen and 50 paise coin. Just say it has 12 in a dozen...
"A dozen" is an English equivalent of the French phrase une douzaine.Specifically, the feminine singular definite article une means "a, one". The feminine noun douzaine translates as "dozen". The pronunciation will be "yoon doo-zehn" in French.
Six.
"Six of one, a half dozen of the other" means no matter how you say it, the answer is the same.
The English word "dozen" is derived from the French "douzaine", meaning "a group of twelve things". Similar words exist in French for "quinzaine" (a group of 15), "vingtaine" (20) and "centaine" (100), though these do not have English equivalents.
The term dozen means a grouping of 12 and comes from the French term douzaine. This grouping term is perceived to be one of the earliest primitive groupings.
dwanaście = twelve or a dozen = tuzin