Denouement is the climax, the ultimate conclusion, the final act.
le jour, la journée
That is the correct spelling of bonjour (hello, or good day, in French).
It's a phonetic English spelling of the Irish phrase go brách translated as 'for ever'.Go brách na breithe, till the Day of Judgment.Éirinn go brách! Ireland for ever!
Mother is correct. Muther is slang and often referred to as "Ghetto-speak". Such phonetic spelling pre-dates modern day misspellings such as substituting the letter "z" for words properly spelled with an "s" (such as "boyz.")
It's a phonetic English spelling of the Irish phrase go brách translated as 'for ever'.Go brách na breithe, till the Day of Judgment.Éirinn go brách! Ireland for ever!
The French greeting (good day) is spelled "bonjour".
Kaddish is said every day of the year. For its phonetic recital see the attached Related Link.
The number 2 is written the same. However, the literal spelling of '2nd' is 'deuxième'. e.g. 'le deuxième jour' (the second day).
a short answer would be to say (phonetically...) Come see, come sahh... I know that spelling is wrong obviously, but that would be the pronunciation .
I think that : week-end is English and weekend is Dutch.
That is the correct spelling of "independence day." In the US, the day observed annually on July 4 is Independence Day.
Im not sue if im spelling it right but it is a'cu de crayo'n (ah coo, day cray ohn) source: me! i speak some french (another scource is phineaus and ferb!!!)