mouche is fly and bateau is cake, so ''cake fly'' or perhaps fly on the cake! I must offer a correction: Bateau in French is boat. Perhaps you were thinking of gateau, which is a kind of fruit cake. Mouche does not simply mean 'fly', that is but one possible meaning of the word as used in the phrase "Bateau Mouche". A mouche is also a specific type of boat.
Bateau-mouche sur la Seine was created in 1896.
Le Bateau-Mouche
'un bateau' is a ship in French.
The term is a "bateau mouche".
they are open excursion boats in Paris that provide visitors with a view of the city from the river Seine
A bateau-mouche (plural bateaux-mouches) is a kind of excursion boat operated in Paris to display monuments from the river Seine. It is a brand name created out of the fictional character Jean-Sébastien Mouche, reportedly a founder of the company.
These boats on the Seine river are called "bateau-mouche", pl. "des bateaux-mouches"
bath
a boat
"Scada mouche" does not have a standard meaning in the English language. It appears to be a combination of the term "SCADA," which stands for Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition, with the French word "mouche," which means "fly." It is possible that it may have a specific meaning in a certain context or language, but without more information, its precise definition is unclear.
Boat bateau Ferry-boat paquebot Large ship navire Warship "navire de guerre" or "bateau guerrier" Sail-boat voilier