The forms of "nouveau" in French are masculine singular "nouveau," feminine singular "nouvelle," masculine plural "nouveaux," and feminine plural "nouvelles."
In French, "new" is translated as "nouveau" and "masculine" as "masculin." The word "famine" in French means "famine" in English.
rien de neuf
Nouveau and nouvel are the masculine equivalents of the French feminine adjective nouvelle. Context makes clear whether the form, translated as "new" in English, before a word beginning with a consonant (case 1) or a vowel (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciation will be "noo-vo" and "noo-vel" in Alsatian French.
You can say "Quoi de neuf ?" in French to ask someone "What's new?" or "What's up?" in English.
The word for chair in French is "chaise." In French, nouns do not have gendered forms like in languages such as Spanish. So, whether you are referring to a chair as masculine or feminine is not necessary in French.
Nouveau riche is French for "new rich".
Nouveau
Nouveau is pronounced NOO-VOE. Hope I helped.
un nouveau bébé - un nouveau-né
nouveau
A new baby is un nouveau bébé or un nouveau-né in French.
You say "nouveau jour"... nouveau = new / jour = day.
'nouveau travail' = formal 'nouveau boulot' = more familiar
The phrase, 'Un nouveau commencement, un nouveau debut,' is French. It translates into English as, 'A new start, a new life.'
nouveau / nouvelle
Son nouveau
Categorizer nouveau