Translation: crayon gris
gris is a masculine adjective meaning grey/gray in French. The feminine form is 'grise'.
Nezumiiro. - I have found that haiiro (はいいろ) can also be used to mean ashen or grey in color.
Gris.
The singular grigia and the plural grigie in the feminine and the singular grigio and the plural grigiin the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English word "grey." The choice depends upon the gender and quantity of the grey objects or people at issue. The respective pronunciations will be "GREE-dja" and "GREE-djey" in the feminine singular and plural and "GREE-djo" and "GREE-djee" in the masculine singular and plural in Italian.
gris, grise
"According to whim" and "at will" are just two English equivalents of the French phrase au gré. The pronunciation will be "oh grey" in French.
"Grey cat" in English means gatto grigio in Italian.
"The Grey Sisters" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Les grées. The pronunciation of the feminine plural noun - which references the single eye- and single tooth-sharing old grey witch daughters Deino, Enyo, and Pemphredo of sea god Phorcys and sea goddess Ceto - will be "ley grey" in French.
"Small grey nest" in English is piccolo nido grigio in Italian.
gris is a masculine adjective meaning grey/gray in French. The feminine form is 'grise'.
Nezumiiro. - I have found that haiiro (はいいろ) can also be used to mean ashen or grey in color.
Gregorio is an Italian equivalent of the French name Grégoire. The masculine proper noun in question originates in the Greek name Γρηγόριος (Grēgorios, "alert," "watchful"). The respective pronunciations of the equivalents of the English name "Gregory" will be "grey-gwar" in French and "grey-GO-ryo" in Italian.
Il fais grismeans It is grey. Il meaning it. Fais meaning Is. And Gris meaning grey.
"Rust grey-brown" is an English equivalent of the French color écureuil. The word in question literally references the backyard and park resident, the squirrel, whose most attractive coloration may be conveyed by creating orange from yellow touched with red and then rust from orange touched with blue. Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation nevertheless remains "eykyoo-reye" in French.
It was translated in 2012. See http://www.timesofisrael.com/fifty-shades-of-grey-makes-it-into-hebrew/
Migrer is just one French equivalent of the infinitive "to migrate" in English.Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the present form of the infinitive. It will be pronounced "mee-grey" in French.
Yes. #17 is Smoke Grey.