to be honest with you, there are as many french words as there are as many english words, so according to this, im not sure what french words you're looking for, so i will just list a sentence with four english words translated to french (or more like a french sentence translated to english):
J'ai besoin de plus d'informations.
I need more information.
we spell fourteen as quatorze in french pronouncing katorz
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.
See link
Angleterre is the French name for England.
four letter words beginning wih d are: Dart
quatre chiens
1. Déjà vu 2. culdesac
areablabdeedkickkooknounsaysdeadhighhaththatbombtiltpumpsitsnon(french)pulppropfluffhushGrogbobb
Knowing a few dozen French words is enough to ask your way and understand the directions. To get a correct understanding of everyday topics and be able to have a satisfying conversation, about four to five hundred French words would be quite enough. A sizeable part of the French population uses about 600 vocabulary words and fit perfectly in the French society.
The number four in french is "quatre"
The Trinidad dialect is referred to as patois or creole. French words make up, many of these words. For example, bonmaten-good morning, mesi- thanks, bonjou-hello, and souple-please.
un four is an oven in French
'un four' is the name for 'an oven' in French.
four hundred is translated 'quatre cent' in French
Half of eight is four, and four in french is quatre.
Answer: While Spanish has more total speakers, French has a wider distribution of speakers around the globe and is spoken on every continent. French is easier to learn than Spanish; the latter has more irregular verbs, four words that mean 'you', two words that mean 'for', etc. French also sounds nicer.
"words" is "mots" in French.