It is a French word. Tricky because it has many meanings. You can say 'Il est de taille' meaning colloquially 'he's a big fellow.'
The word "taille" in French can mean "size" or "waist." Example: "Je porte une jupe taille haute" (I am wearing a high-waisted skirt).
"La taille" in English translates to "the size" or "the waist" depending on the context.
Gรฉrard Lenorman mesure environ 1,78 mรจtre.
use ize in sentence
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.
Sure, I can use "so" at the beginning of a sentence.
"la taille" what's your size? = quelle est votre taille ?
un taille-crayon (plural: des taille-crayons) is a pencil sharpener in French.
Pronounce 'taille' with the ending sound of "why"
How tall am I? can be translated: "quelle taille est-ce que je fais ?" or "quelle est ma taille ?" in French
un taille-crayon (masculine noun, plural: des taille-crayons) is a pencil sharpener in French.
'taille-crayon' is a masculine word. Write: le taille-crayon, un taille-crayon. the first part of the noun is made with a verb, it will not take a plural mark - but the second park is a noun, it will take an 's' when plural: pluural: des taille-crayons, les taille-crayons
If it's a pencil-sharpener, un taille-crayons.
A sharpener is called "un taille-crayon" in French.
Jacques de La Taille has written: 'La maniere'
The population of Saint-Nicolas-de-la-Taille is 1,310.
In English, it means medium-sized.
Second