noun # sol # plancher # étage # minimum verb # terrasser # plancher # revêtir # embarrasser # battre # prospérer
Floor in French is "étage" or "plancher," depending on the context. "Étage" typically refers to a specific level in a building, while "plancher" refers to the surface of the floor.
You say "quatrième étage" in French to indicate the fourth floor.
"Sweep the floor" in French is "balayer le sol."
quatrième (4th) étage as the first floor (ground) is called rez-de-chaussée and the second floor is called premier (1st) étage
"Verdieping" is a Dutch word, not French. In French, the word for "floor" or "storey" is "étage".
In a French-speaking country, "le premier étage" refers to the floor above the ground floor, while in the US, the first floor is typically the ground floor. This difference arises from the way floors are numbered, with the ground floor considered "floor 0" in French-speaking countries and "floor 1" in the US.
Le troisième étage is third floor in French.
The tenth floor is "le dixième étage" in French.
premier étage
Dernier etage.
You say "quatrième étage" in French to indicate the fourth floor.
plans d'étage
D'appui au sol.
"Sweep the floor" in French is "balayer le sol."
le plancher
le vingt-neuvième étage
"le neuvième étage"
On the ground floor (street level) is "au rez de chaussée" in French.