Resume comes from the French language... It means 'summary'.
It depends what type of resume you mean.
Resume comes from Latin (via Old French). 1375-1425; late Middle English resumen (< Middle French resumer) < Latin resūmere to take back, take again, equivalent to re- re- + sūmere toRésumé comes from a later version of the same word: 1795-1805; < French, noun use of past participle of résumer to sum up.
The word 'resume' comes form the Middle English resumen, from Old French resumer, from Latin resūmere : re-, re- + sūmere, to takeresume' is a French word meaning short story or brief overview.
We use the word resume here in Canada too, and in all English speaking countries; the English language borrows lots of words from French (historically, this is the result of the Norman Conquest in the year 1066).
it is not a French word
The word originates from Latin as 'resumere' meaning 'take again' or resume again'. It passed into French as 'resumer' and was subsequently borrowed by the English speaking world to mean a short descriptive summery of events
if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
This is not a French word and means nothing in French.
There is no such word as 'rozelle' in French.
there is no such word as 'peneuf' in French.
hartford is not a french word.