the ... the "e" in "the" has an acsant-a-goo
tea is spelled 'thé' in French.
Thé glacé; but if you buy some in a French shop, you'll most likely find that the label says 'Ice Tea'.
'thé (masc.) some tea : du thé the tea : le thé
I like drinking tea is "j'aime boire du thé" in French.
A tea plantation would be "un plantation de thé" in French. A pleasure garden designed to drink tea, and for strolling would be "un jardin d'agrément" in French.
Iced tea in French is "Thé glacé". "Tea" is masculine therefore there is no extra "e" at the end of "glacé"
French revolution is the retaliation of the British to the Prussia for their suuport of the Boston tea party movement
Peach The
The French like coffee more
Bubble Tea translated into French is: thé de bulle. An example sentence is: J'ai fait le thé à bulles. This means: I made the bubble tea.
Yes. French aren't big consumers of tea (250g per capita/year, while the English consume 12 times more) but France is not a producing country and import its tea.
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