It must be Bisous
it is a kind (and infant) way to say baiser (a kiss)
Bisous are kisses
cooked twice
The word origin of biscuit is "FRENCH" which means twice cooked.
The prefix "bi-" in the word biscuit means "twice" or "double," indicating a process of baking the dough twice to achieve a crisp texture.
The general French word is usually biscuit or gâteau sec.
The word "biscuit" comes from the Old French for "twice cooked," so "bis-" means "twice."
Biscuit gateau
the way that you say " deliciouse sugar cookie" in french is: Lat`potase chis`ta mo`lopate'. YUMM!
it means cake
'un biscuit' (masc.) or 'un petit gâteau' (which means small cake)
Twice-baked potatoes The word 'biscuit' literally means baked twice.
Biscuit
The UK don't really have the american style "biscuit" or "biscuits and gravy". The closest thing to it would either be a crusty bread roll, or a scone (or a fusion of the two).The Americans have got this one badly wrong, however. The word "biscuit" is french, and comes from the latin "bis coctus" (bis=twice, coctus=cook). The literal translation in both french and latin means "cooked twice" - which of course the american "biscuit" is NOT cooked twice... so maybe a new word is required for them :p
'biscuit' comes from the word 'cuit' (cooked, done) and the Latin root 'bis' (two times', so literally it means twice cooked.