if you mean literally it's "tout les mots"
There are about 75,000 words in the French vocabulary, so the list would be a bit long.
all words in the English language, always have 1 or more vowels, all words have meanings, and English words usually come from, Greek, Latin, or the French language.
Some English words that are similar to French words include: Date (English) / Date (French) Cafe (English) / Café (French) Table (English) / Table (French) Animal (English) / Animal (French)
There are thousands if not tens of thousands of words of French origin in common use in English. It would be impossible to list them all in this space. "Impossible" and "space" are two of them.
yes it is because Spanish, french and German is easier than English because there is more words in English than there is in Europe.
Words such as T-shirt, weekend, baby sitter, airbag, flirt are in the French language.
Especially in the middle ages, the french and English peoples mixed together, and adopted words. The French have many cognates of English words, as we have french words. Particularly, England was once under a french ruler,(I forget the name), and during that time period many words were exchanged from language to language.
There is no definitive answer to this question, it is difficult to decide what is 'English', there are Latin words used in Law and French words used in cooking. However there is a dictionary know to contain 171,416 words in current use and 47,156 obsolete words. All in all there may be 250,000 words available in English.
Chat (cat) Bonjour (hello) Café (cafe) Restaurant (restaurant) Baguette (baguette)
French words were mainly introduced in English after William the Conqueror invaded England in 1066.
the french word is "avoir"
One would use a French-English dictionary to translate words from French to English. Some online French-English dictionaries include Word Reference and the dictionary hosted at French Linguistics.