It means someone who drives you
In French, the word "chauffeur" means "driver." It is derived from the French verb "chauffer" which means "to heat (up)." Chauffeur < Chauffer < Chaufer (Anglo-French) < Calfare (Altered Latin Word) < Calefacere (Latin)
The french word for driver is Chauffeur
No, it is a French word.
Chauffeur is a masculine word in french. Translated it is 'le chauffeur'. An example sentence is 'Je remercie le chauffeur' which means 'I thanked the chauffeur'.
french
"chauffer" means "to heat" in French. The French word "chauffeur" comes from the fact that drivers of the first automobiles had to heat the motor before starting it.
chauffeur is french for an employed driver
The word 'chauffeur' is French and it is used to describe a paid automobile driver. The word is a nickname derived from the word "chauffer" which means "to heat" because early automobiles were steam powered and required a person to preheat the boiler.
chauffeur or fahrer
Chauffeur
It originated in France. The verb chauffer means to heat, and on early steam engines they needed someone to heat up the water to make the steam, so that person was called the chauffeur, or if it was a woman, a chauffeuse.
The word chauffeur is a noun, a person employed to drive. Chauffeur is also a verb for the act of chauffeuring.