bois
bois (masc.) means wood (as a material, or forest) in French.
An axe (wood-cutting instrument) is "une hache" (fem.) in French.
The French word bois means wood, timber or woodwind. It could also mean woods as in forest. It also means to drink, to absorb, and to drain however it is commonly used for wood.
grand bois means big wood in English.
"Bathgate" is an English loan word in French.Specifically, the original name of the town is "Boar Wood." It is an English equivalent of the original Cumbrian "baedd coed." The meaning in French is "bois de sanglier" ("wood of a boar").The respective pronunciations of the English loan word and of the meaning in French are "baht-geht" and "bwah duh saw-glyeh."
Yes - a cubic metre of wood is called a stere - derived from the French word stère, meaning "a cubic metre" - from which the French word stèrer also derives, meaning "to measure in cubic metres".
"Bois" in French translates to "wood" in English.
It's from the French tronce, tronche, a stump or, piece of wood To be punished or beaten severely.
"To work" is an English equivalent of the French word travailler.Specifically, the word is a verb in its form as a present infinitive. It also may mean "to work on" as in the contexts of impressing someone, improving performance, molding metal, and sculpting wood. The pronunciation will be "tra-va-ley" in French.
Well I think it depends on the type of fence : The first translation which comes to my mind is "clôture", it's the wire type fence. If it's in wood it's then a "palissade".
No, wood is not a compound word.
Mbao is the Kikuyu word for the English word wood.