'cul-de-sac' is a common French expression to indicate a road closed at the other end.
"Street of the Lilacs" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Rue des Lilas. The phrase most famously references a road in the 19th arrondissement ("district") of Paris, France and a title by the Breton traditional music group Katé-Mé. The pronunciation will be "ryoo dey lee-la" in French.
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'hopeful journey' is the following: iter cum spe. The word 'iter' means 'going, walk, way'; 'journey, march'; 'permission to march, right of way'; 'road, way'; 'course, method, way'. The word 'cum' means 'with'; and 'spei' means 'expectation'; 'hope'; 'anticipation, fear, foreboding'.
Camino (pronounced cah-mee-noh) is the most common way to say it. You can also say Calle (Ki-yeh) which literally means street.
Many people answer "a drawbridge" to this..... but, technically a drawbridge is either 'raised' or 'lowered'. However, the famous Tower Bridge in London carries road traffic across the river Thames. But as the photos of it show, the bridge is split in the middle and each side can be raised at an angle to allow ships to pass up and down the river. So, when Tower Bridge is open to road traffic it is closed to shipping, and when it is closed to road traffic it is open to shippping.
The Latin word for "road" is 'via.' The ablative plural of 'via' is 'viis.'
I would assume, 'On the road to glory'.
Means continiation of a restriction. "Rappel" - reminder in french.
The French word "rue" translates to "street" in English.
Roadside means a piece of property, usually a business that is located near a road, often a high traffic road. This word is often used to form the phrase "roadside cafe," which means a cafe near a road.
'Route de brique jaune' is a French equivalent of 'yellow brick road'.The feminine noun 'route' means 'road, route'. The preposition 'de' means 'of, from'. The feminine noun 'brique' means 'brick'. The adjective 'jaune' means 'yellow'.All together, they're pronounced 'root duh breek zhohn'.
yes you can get a ticket on a closed road in any state
(Answer) Some roads are closed due to like thru traffic, flooding, bridge is out, or a accident happened.
'une piste' (fem.) is a track or dirt road in French. It also means a lead in detective novels.
The Closed Road - 1916 was released on: USA: 24 April 1916
Beauchemin is a French name that means good road or pretty road. The name started in France and emigrated to Quebec.
ViaEDIT: Via (long a) could be used for "by the road", and could be taken figuratively for 'by means'However, much more common is the English phrase "by means of smthg" is simply shown by using the ablative.He killed him by means of a sword = interficit eum gladio.
There actually is no prepositional phrase in that sentence. is = verb (copula) this = subject (demonstrative pronoun) the road = predicate nominative (determiner/article + noun) to take = infinitive phrase (a kind of verb phrase), modifying "the road"