In French, "guard" is translated as "gardien" for a male guard and "gardienne" for a female guard.
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.
"On guard!" in English is en garde! in French.
En garde is actually a call made by the referee of a bout to get into fighting stance before combat. en garde is french for on guard.
Tamia or Suisse (in Canada - it comes from the similitude from their stripes to those on the Vatican's Swiss Guard)
Well, if they say 2 guard that means a shooting guard like Kobe, if they say guard it's like a point guard like Steve Nash.
Many referred to the French as the immortals. The French were not troubled to guard the English sailors because they felt the sailors were not a threat.
Garda (a guard); Cosnaím, caomhnaím, gardálaim (I guard)
Guard in Spanish is Alero.
une garde
protège-cou
"But take care, I'm telling you!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Mais garde, dis donc! The statement translates literally as "But look out, I say therefore!" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee donk" in French.
According to Bulbapedia, it is indeed derived from French. Garde is French for guard and "devoir" is French for "duty."
to say is the verb 'dire' in French.