The spelling from French is coup (a blow), meaning a victory or triumph.
Not sure how you spell it, but my buddy (whose family is from New Iberia, La.) said "coo-yahn" means crazy in Cajun.
56 is 56 spelled in words it's cincuenta y seis pernounced; cin-coo-en-tah e sa-es
couillon (a bit of a simpleton) fatras = 1/ a mixed bag of unrelated things, with no order in their arrangement, or 2/ unrelated sentences about irrelevant topics, making no sense for the listener
coo-kay, not much different but that's it
Kuroe. Pronounced Coo-Row-A (say the letter A for A)
coo coo
coup
"Merci beaucoup"Pronounce ~ "Mair-see Bow-coo"
It depends on the contract the COO has made with the employing company. There is no law that says "A COO gets options on 100,000 shares of stock." The company might not issue stock, might not have stock options, might not use options to pay its executives...
The spelling is coop (for chickens) or coupe (a car style also pronounced coo-pay).
no it is coocoo coo coo coo coo coo coo oo
a kind of coo, coo noise! Rythmic coooo cooooo, coo coo, coooo cooooo, coo coo
The Lion King.
pigeon "Coo coo! Coo coo! Cacoo!"
This principle is known as the rule of foreseeability or the principle of direct damages. It states that damages for breach of contract should only be awarded if they are the direct and foreseeable result of the breach. Indirect or consequential damages that are not a natural consequence of the breach are generally not recoverable.
the one with the coo coo clock in it
cooing. you know, coo coo! coo coo!