"voulez-vous utiliser le toboggan aujourd'hui" means "do you want to use the slide today".
Utiliser in French means "to use."
According to Google Translate, "peut voir le truck aujourdhui" means "can see the truck today".
'Ã utiliser dans ce train' means 'to be used in this train' in English.
Utiliser means 'to use' in French.
No such word. If you mean aujourdhui (meaning today) it is oh zhaw dwee .
use mean "utiliser" " se servir de" .... in french
If you mean toboggan as in sports it is spelled t-o-b-o-g-g-a-n to-bog-gan
It's the past tense of the verb to toboggan which means to slide down a hill on a toboggan. A toboggan is a long flat-bottomed sledge or sleigh without runners, usually sitting three or four passengers or the equivalent in baggage.
I assume you mean who invented the device. Like a lot of things it evolved, in a sense from roller skates and (skooters) made from soap boxes with handlebars on front and having roller skate (trucks) fore and aft. There is some evidence that Amelia Earhart and her sister made a sort of improvised toboggan ride- that might have had commercial possibilities as a fold-away carnival ride of the slide or toboggan type with cars using roller-skate chassis in part. a modern replica of this device- a display and not a (ride) is on display, courtesy of a local shop class, at the Atcheson , KS Amelia Earhart birthplace museum. It is going to far to give Amelia credit as the inventor as the device was actually a bobsled-like gravity ride, but there are similarities.
It's an instance of the differences in spelling between the American and the British English. The online Webster says, in part (http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/utilization):"Etymology: French utiliser", so the original English spelling was, probably, "-sation". Check out this page on American vs. British spelling differences: http://www2.gsu.edu/~wwwesl/egw/jones/differences.htm
It mean what you don't what does it mean.
Mean is the average.