The French nobility title "comte" is translated by "Count" in English.
a gentleman can be called "un gentilhomme" in French, but is is quite outdated and conveys the meaning of some nobility. The word gentleman is also used and understood by most French, with the same meaning it has in English.
"un gentilhomme" when speaking of a man of some nobility in the past. Otherwise French use the term "gentleman" for a well-educated, courteous man. Un monsieur
in French what does E O mean
Sinssa doesn't mean anything in French.
That is not a "real" name and it does not mean anything in French.
There are hundreds of french cheeses such as Brie, Comte and Roquefort.
From its etymology it seems to me that Comte de Villionis more likely
General Comte de Rochambeau was a French hero in the American Revolution.
The Aristocracy/Nobility made up the second estate in the French Revolution.
It's a title of nobility, the equivalent of English "Duke".
The French phrase "noblesse oblige" in English means "nobility obliges." This means that one must act according to standards, and originally this phrase was geared specifically to nobility only.
He was a French philosopher. He was a founder of Sociology and the Doctrine of Positivism. The link has much more informaion on Augistine Comte
It was the French Revolution and its aftermath that convinced Auguste Comte that society needed to be guided by thinkers who understood social laws. Comte was a French philosopher.
Comte de Rochambeau
A French Dude.NEW RESPONDENTThe Comte of Rochambeau
1, 2, 3, 4... and so on ;-) 'Comte'
auguste comte