Mme is the French abbreviation for "madame." It would translate as "Mrs."
Mme is in reference to a woman. mostly out of respect. Its the same as ma'am.
Moi, Madame, or me, Miss in English.
"vous avez assez yeux Mme" reads litterally "you have enough eyes madam". (Makes no sense to me).
Madame is abbreviated to Mme, the plural is Mmes.
Madame, asides from being ( Mrs.) is a title of Respect- all Female members of the Legion of HONOR are styled Madame. what Madame do you mean- Mme Tussaud, Mme Curie, getting a bit more modern, Mme Deneuve- be more specific!
Mme is French, short for madame and equivalent to the English Mrs.As it is French rather than English, it would mostly be used to give a "French touch", for example because the characters in a story are French.See for example the Agatha Christie novels with detective Poirot - the author is English and the stories take place in England, but the character is consistently called "Monsieur Poirot" or "M. Poirot" to drive home that he is "foreign"."Mme. Amalie was excited by her first trip to see the Eiffel Tower".
Mme. d'Esperance died in 1919.
Mme Papavoine was born in 1735.
Mme. d'Esperance was born in 1855.
You say Madame. You can abbreviate it to Mme but only in writing.The English word "ma'am" translated to French is "madame."
In French, "Mme" (pronounced "Madame") stands for "Mrs." It is used as a courtesy title for married or older women.
In Guy de Maupassant's short story, "The Necklace" (1884), it is Mme. Loisel, the one who borrowed and lost the necklace, who recognizes Mme. Forestier. This meeting sets up the twist ending.