Aujourd'hui means Today
"Oui oui on a marre d etre rejeter?"
The French expression "aujourd'hui" comes from the Old French phrase "au jor d'hui," which means "on the day of today." Over time, the phrase evolved into the single word "aujourd'hui," which is used to mean "today" in modern French.
oui, (you say it as we)
# Nude. # In a natural state: an au naturel hairstyle. # Cooked simply.
Jour de j
I think is yes because it's the law ! In school you have french and english in Canada,like me ! ;-D Je dirais que oui,car c'est la loi au Canada ! À l'école vous avez deux cours de langues francais et anglais ! Tout comme moi ! ;-D
The terms "H-Hour" and "D-Day" comes from the military's term for the hour and day when an attack will occur, and as such, it is a variable. (It is used instead of an exact date when either the date is unknown, or secrecy is required.) Therefore, I assume that the French call the D-Day invasion of Normandy "Le Jour J" for the same reason; the "J" is the variable for the "jour" (day) of the attack.
"Jour-J": literally, "J-Day."
The normal ones: Yes Oui Mmmhmm Yup Yeah Aye (I use that one. just cause it's piratey :D) Uh-huh Ya Indeed Indubitibly (my good man) :)
of course not :D its always on
I dont think anyone knows that :D
Au revoir! Hope that helped :D