It is the same word in English and French.
The pronunciation of the U isn't the same, though. In English it begins with a y-sound like the word "you", but in French it is just the pure u-vowel like in the words tu, du, and une.
"Unique" in French is "unique".
"Je suis fils unique" in French translates to "I am an only child" in English.
Je suis= I am Fils unique= Only son. It means I am only son. We miss out "the" in the french words, so we only say "I am only son".
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.
You can say "we will" in French by using the phrase "nous allons."
one of a kind is translated 'unique' in French
"un style unique"
'je suis unique'
I love being unique would be : J'aime être unique (:
"Je suis fille unique"
"seul enfant, enfant unique". This is not gender specific, and the words "fils unique / fille unique" (only son / only daughter) are more common in spoken French.
Vous êtes le seul et unique
Japon, roughly "zhah--POhn", where the little "n" is a nasalized sound that's pretty much unique to French.
Unique is of French origin anyway. Vive la difference. C'est unique.
Unique homestyle cooking is "une cuisine familiale unique" in French.
tu es mon seul et unique / tu es ma seule et unique
Le chien merveilleux, unique en son genre.