French is the language represented by the word vague. The word serves as a feminine/masculine singular adjective that means "hazy," "unclear" or "vague," as a feminine singular noun that means "(water) wave," or as a verb form that means "I wander" or "You wander," "(that) I may wander" or "that) you may wander" or "(you) Wander!" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "vahg" in French.
old french or Latin language from vagus.
Probably because of its origin in French (vague, 16th century) and Latin (vagus). In Latin "us" is a common suffix. Anglo-Saxon (old english) and Norse (viking) words do not have such characteristics, but many Norman French borrow words (after 1066) have them, due to the Latin origin of French.
No vague comes from the Latin word vagus which means 'wandering, uncertain'.
Vague is French for ocean wave, from the Latin vagusmeaning 'wandering'. Insofar as any individual wave is indistinct, changeable and transient, vague has come to mean poorly defined, indefinite and incompletely known or understood.
latin in french is '' I DON'T KNOW''
latin the internet tells people its french cause latin in french is pioneer
Affair is not a Latin word; it comes from the French a faire (to do).
french: l'ongle (masculine)latin: ungula (feminine)
the French word "ovale" coming from the latin word for egg.
It was originally Latin.
French (as in the French language) = GallicaBack, when Latin was a spoken language, they called France: Gallia.Hope this helps.
The word vous means you, and it is French, not Latin.