To be incorrect is avoir faute
"Blaguer." (this may be incorrect)
CORRECTED: La glacee; I suppose one can say 'creme glacee' (the answer below is incorrect). Cream is 'la crème' in French.
The correct phrase is "in est" in Latin. "Est in" would be grammatically incorrect.
you cannot say "he have" this is incorrect, it is " he has"
"ving-cinquième" or "25e" in abbreviated form (or "25es" for the plural.) "25ème" or "25ième" are sometimes used, but they are incorrect spellings.
It is grammatically incorrect to say sister and sister. You just say sisters.
Since it is a French term it is correctly pronounced lon-zher-ee. The common pronunciation "lon-zher-ay" is incorrect and has no linguistic basis.
J swei doesn't mean anything. The spelling is incorrect. I believe you want to say: "Je suis". Je suis = I am / I'm
No, it is not incorrect. You could say, "These ones are the best for baking."
No. This is incorrect. We always say 'India has".
CORRECTED: The first post is completely incorrect. Say nous marchons [noo mar-shon] *cut sort the N sound at the end. El boulanger come te legeritos por favert
nothing's wrong would be translated 'rien n'est faux, rien n'est incorrect'. That gives a double negative and French speakers just say usually 'rien' (when told there's something wrong here...), or use the opposite phrase 'tout VA bien' (all is good).