a dead end road in french is called CUL DE SAC and u can
sometimes see this in england
A dead end road in French is called "une impasse."
"Sin salida" in Spanish means "no way out" or "dead end." It refers to a situation where there is no escape or alternative path available.
A bear is Un Ours. pronounced more like an ore, rather than our. Unlike most french words, the s is NOT silent. There is a ver prevalent s sound at the end.
FIN? Yes, that's right but if you want to make it 'THE' end instead of just 'end' it would be, la fin.
"Tu es Français" means "You are French" in French.
No, the sentence should use a hyphen to connect "dead end" as a compound modifier: "He knew he had a dead-end job the first day he showed up for work."
In French it means "bottom of the sack" and a cul-de-sacis a road or street with a dead end, and only one way in or out.
'cul-de-sac' is a common French expression to indicate a road closed at the other end.
at the end of a dead-end road
This means that the path, road or trail that you are on hits an end, it goes no where.
the dead end!!!
it's at the end of dead-ends-road
A dead end street ( the end of a bag)
Its at the end of a dead-end road
It is at a dead end road.
un cul-de-sac (literallly "bag's end") is a dead end street or situation in French.
I think you are looking for "cul de sac".
dead mans lake and two friends riding to the end of the road