Town, city.
"In French, the word 'ville' means 'city' or 'town'."
Ville doesn't mean anything in Finnish, it's a name. In Swedish "ville" is an imperfect of "vill", and "vill" means "want".
"Ville moyenne" is a French equivalent of the English word "Middleton" or "Middletown."Specifically, the feminine noun "ville" means "city." The feminine adjective "moyenne" means "middle." The pronunciation is "vee mwah-yehn."
"terai" is not a french word.
It's not a French word
if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
The French word "noisette" means "hazelnut" in English.
The French word "oui" (pronounced "we") translates to "yes" in English. The English word "we" translates to "nous" (pronounced "new") in French.
Which city do you live in is an English equivalent of 'Dans quelle ville tu abites'. The phrase in French is pronounced 'dawn kehl veel too ah-beet'.In the word by word translation, the preposition 'dans'means 'in, into'. The feminine interrogative 'quelle' means 'which, what'. The feminine noun 'ville' means 'city'. The subject pronoun 'tu' means 'you'. The verb 'abites'means '[you] are living, do live, live'.
"befits" isn't a French word.
Nault isn't a French word.
The French word "la" means "the" in English.