The feminine adjective douce in French means "soft" or "sweet" in English.
"The sweet mansion" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase la douce mansion. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "la dooss maw-syo" in French.
"Sweet lady" in French is translated as "douce dame."
'Maison douce' is an automatic translation of 'sweet home' in English.
It is doux in the masculine, douce in the feminine, for things that are naturally sweet. Artificially sweet is sucré(e) "sugared."
Douce or doux in the singular and douces or doux in plural are French equivalents of the English word "sweet." Context makes clear whether feminine (cases 1, 3) or masculine (examples 2, 4) genders suit. The respective pronunciations will be "doos" in the feminine and "doo" in the masculine in French.
There is no song caled "douce pluie" in French, but "Douce nuit, sainte nuit", the French version of the German song "Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht" is known in English as "Silent Night, Holy Night".
The French word "douce" translates to "soft" or "mild" in English. It can also mean "sweet" when referring to flavors or personalities.
My name translated from English to french is Allen
Douce indulgence is a French equivalent of the English phrase "sweet indulgence."Specifically, the feminine adjective douce means "sweet." The feminine noun indulgence is a cognate in English and French. The pronunciation is "doo-seh-dyool-zhawnss."
Douce vie! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Sweet life!" The feminine singular phrase may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular la since French employs definite articles where English uses no "the." The pronunciation will be "(la) doos vee" in French.
For a woman: "Douce, mais folle" For a man: "Doux, mais fou"
Vendredi in French is "Friday" in English.