yard (as in backyard, schoolyard...) is translated 'la cour' in French. Cour is a feminine word.
coudée
the French word cour means 'yard' in English. 'la cour d'école' is the school yard.
(back)yard = une cour a yard (measure) = a yard is approximately 0.9 metre.
the school yard is called 'la cour d'école' in French.
The word Gaff means a 'large barbed fishing spear' or a Yard to extend the top portion of a sail'. It is of French origin
yardstick
Yard Crashers - 2008 Country French 9-4 was released on: USA: April 2013
No, the word 'yard' is a noun or a verb.The noun 'yard' is a word for a unit of length (US); an area of land around a house; an outside area of a business used for activities related to that business; a word for a thing.The verb 'yard' is an obscure use meaning to enclose, gather, or put into a yard; a word for an action.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun 'yard' is it.Examples:The house has a nice yard. It will be a place for the children to play.This job is at a railroad yard, but I don't know where it is located?
Yard Crashers - 2008 Ultimate French Drain 2-13 was released on: USA: 2009
Get back to Latin! In latin the word for ship, Nauta-(fro which nautical is derived) is in the feminine gender, So is marina, which is marine (as an adjective, meaning nautical, anlso means Navy, Fleet, dock-yard, etc) Both of these are in the Female. so when we pass the Conn- Totus Tuus!-in Latin-She being understood, All YOurs! so there you have it. In French Barre (not the drinking variety, but used to mean tiller , by extension steering wheel,) is also in the feminine- so She"s all Yours!
In Japanese usually the word 庭 /ni wa/ (garden, yard) is used for 'yard' but it generally means 'garden'. Due to the specific building way of Japanese homes and that usually there is a small garden in their houses these two meanings have merged.ヤード /yaa do/ as borrowed word from English is also another word in Japanese for the word 'yard' in its different meanings.
Pulire le foglie autunnali del cortile is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to clean fall leaves in the yard." The present infinitive, feminine plural definite article and noun, feminine/masculine plural adjective, prepositional combination, and masculine singular noun may be rendered literally by word order into English as "to clean (polish) the leaves autumnal of the yard." The pronunciation will be "poo-LEE-rey ley FO-lyey OW-toon-NA-lee del kor-TEE-ley" in Italian.