The word facade (French façade) means a building front, or face. It is used metaphorically to mean an image presented that is not the true one, such as "a facade of innocence" or "his generosity was only a facade to cover his larcenous activities."
The face or front- as in the facade of a building.
The French word facade means front, or frontage.
frontage
hartford is not a french word.
it is not a French word!
wage isn't a French word.
Mailletz is not a french word, it's the name of a place
Mom in French
The word facade (French façade) means a building front, or face. It is used metaphorically to mean an image presented that is not the true one, such as "a facade of innocence" or "his generosity was only a facade to cover his larcenous activities."
That is the correct spelling of the word facade (fuh-sahd), from the French façade.
You say it "fasaad". Like the French word facade
The French spelling of facade (frontage, or false face) is spelled façade. English does not use the variant C.
" This news report is a Facade! "
Facade. The word comes from the French "frontage" or "face," since the facade faces the street. Many facades are historic architectural elements, and are subject to strict regulations.
1. The facade of the building is made of wood. 2.Everything she does is a facade.
Your facade is very impressive. He loved my Façade.
The word facade is a singular noun; the other form is the plural, facades.
No, it is not. Facade is a noun (fuh-SAHD, from French) meaning a building front, or a false appearance (front).
Façade is a French equivalent of the English noun and French loan-word facade. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun -- which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite (la, "the") or indefinite (une, "a, an") articles and which translates as "dial" (of a clock), "front" (of a face), "frontage" (of a building), "outward appearance" (of a person) -- will be "fah-sahd" in French.
Facade.