1. chat = cat
2. bananes = bananas
3. pantalon = pants
4. orange = orange
5. bracelet = bracelet
6. ski = ski
7. novembre = November
8. oncle = uncle
9. carrotes = carrots
10. parc = park
Almost every word ending by "ion" (attention, tension, information, télévision,...) Poison parking garage tour cycle cinéma téléphone
in french 10 is dix
English, (American)
English,Spanish,Croatian,French
No it is not. It is the metric system invented by the French which based on powers of ten. And it is the Empirical system, not the English system.
dixdix -to pronounce, say "dice" in English with the "i" like in "to be"
American English, four hundred twelve thousand ten. British English, four hundred and twelve thousand and ten.
If you join them together it will make a compound word It is that way in English. We have a separate word for two of the two digit numbers, eleven and twelve. In most other languages, there are words which translate out to "ten and one" and 'ten and two". Otherwise, the word is "teen" meaning "ten" for all the other "ten" words which follow the sequence. According to the dictionary, the two words that English uses has German roots...which are exactly what you have stated. "ten with one left over", and "ten with two left over". So the words in English have roots in old German that state the mathematical decimal formula.
In Welsh, words that begin with "dd" include "ddraig" (dragon) and "ddydd" (day). The "dd" in Welsh represents a voiced dental fricative sound, similar to the English "th" in "this." Other examples include "ddim" (not) and "ddeg" (ten).
The French for ten is dix. (pronounced dee)
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Four thousand, two hundred ten miles.