The French word for cracker is "biscuit" or "cracotte" depending on the type of cracker.
Cheese-cracker.
The plural form of cracker is crackers.
The term "cracker" can be considered offensive by some, particularly when used in a derogatory or racial context towards white people. It is best to avoid using this term and opt for more respectful language.
A homophone for "cracker" is "crack her." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings.
"Cracker" can be both singular and plural. When you refer to one individual cracker, it is singular. When you refer to multiple crackers, it is plural.
The word for a hard bread "cracker" may be craquelin.Other types of crackers and cookies use the familiar term biscuit.
"Christmas cracker" (a small noise-maker that you pop open) is "un pirate de Noël" in French.
cracker = krahkehr (קראקר) crackers = krahkehrim (קראקרים)
The word for a biscuit, cracker, or cookie is galleta.
The word cracker is singular.The plural of the word would be crackers.An example sentence for the singular is: pass me the last cracker, please.An example sentence for the plural is: we had cheese and crackers together.
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The term "cracker" can be considered offensive by some, particularly when used in a derogatory or racial context towards white people. It is best to avoid using this term and opt for more respectful language.
The word for a hard bread "cracker" may be craquelin.Other types of crackers and cookies use the familiar term biscuit.
cracker packer
Cracker is a slang word for a white person. This idiom has its origins in slavery- white people were called "crackers" because of the sound of a slave-owner's whip.
Crackers are 'des gâteaux secs' (often just called 'crackers' also) in French.
a cracker packer