Nobody could possibly say who invented the omelette. The word is French and came into French from Latin; the ancient Romans undoubtedly found their word for the dish on their travels, rather than inventing it themselves. Eggs have been cooked this way since before recorded history, from the thin, flat Asian version used as a wrapper for other foods or sliced into strips for stirfries or garnish, to the thick mix of eggs and vegetables cooked around the Mediterranean and further afield, to the fluffy creations of Provence and other parts of France. Master chefs such as the Frenchman August Escoffier (1846-1935) made an art form of the omelette and described this art beautifully in their writings but, while the great French chefs certainly brought the omelette forward as a sophisticated concept to the world, they cannot be said to have invented it. Like most if not all simple foods, the concept of the dish goes back to the first pans that were set on the first fires, and its origin can't be traced.
Commencer is the word for start in French.
"Rogue" is a french word borrowed into English. So the French word for "rogue" is "rogue".
The word "voyage" in English translates to "voyage" in French.
Cena is not a French word.
l'omelette (it's the same word in English) It means "an omelette"
It's "omelette" in both English and French, since it's a French word.
"Omelette" is the French word for the egg-based dish. They are very popular in France.
Omelette du Fromage
the word omelette comes from france.
It is a French word. It probably comes originally from the Latin "lamella" (thin slice) which evolved into Old French "alemelle", "alemette" (14c.), "amelette" and finally "omelette" (16c.). The last change from "a" to "o" was influenced by the word "œuf" (egg, "ovum" in Latin).
Cheese omelet. omelette de fromage
The French Chef - 1962 The French Omelette - 1.1 was released on: USA: 26 July 1962
You have it right because it's one spelling of the word. The other spelling is omelette, from the French. This is one of those "opinion" spellings.
omelette
feminine
Fromage is French for cheese. Omelette au fromage is an omelette with cheese. Omelette du fromage is a line from Steve Martin's album "Lets Get Small.