they say it's "Français" ^^
A school bag is 'un cartable' in French. Another term also in use is 'un sac d'école'.
A school bag is 'un cartable' in French. Another term also in use is 'un sac d'école'.
The word you're looking for is likely "flic," which is a slang term for a French police officer.
When you just made a slip of the tongue, it is translated in French as "ma langue a fourché". Another term is "faire un lapsus / un lapsus freudien" but the term carries the meaning of unvoluntarily disclosing yourself (Freudian slip) instead of simply using a wrong word.
The French term for the enlightened thinkers was "Les Philosophes."
émigrant or immigrant (same meanings as the English cognates)
There is a French term for dinner that starts with a 'T', and that is 'Table d'hote'. (tobbla dote)
"Du hoc" is not a French word. It may be a misspelling or a term in another language. Can you provide more context or specify the language you are referring to?
French people would say "une intellectuelle", and familiarly "une intello", "une grosse tête". Another term is "un bas-bleu" (blue-stocking). Teachers of French as a second language seems to like that word; but for French people, it is old-fashioned, and was in use only in the upper class.
"Le mal de mer" is the French term for seasickness.
The International System of Units, which is abbreviated "SI" from the French term "le Système international d'unités"
The term "carte blanche" means that one is given the freedom to do as they wish. Another way to say "anything goes". It derives from a French military term reference the white flag of surrender.