"vraiment"
It means- Really
Yes it is from French origin.
First. you should get a book/dictionary about French. After that if you really have the passion to memorize that word by word. Then there you have it. Basic French is for the beginner.
'Vraiment' is the french word for 'really'.
If you really mean chaau, that word is from Chinese. If you really meant ciao, which is pronounced "chow," that word is a French word.
It's easy really, blue in French is bleu.
According to the Google Translator, the French word for the English word "am" is "suis".But if your English sentence starts with "I am" you say it in French as " Je suis".NoteIf you are really asking what is the Frenchword 'am' in French... then obviously it must be 'am'. ..But if you are asking what is the French word for 'I am' in English ... it is 'Je suis'.
"Vrainment" is not a valid French word. It may be a misspelling of "vraiment," which means "truly" or "really" in English.
Détendre, though in conversation most French people will use RELAXER, which is not really French, but what the hell.
I don't really know how but the word is 'Orteils.' Hope it helps:)
Le sein (yes, it really is masculine)
The word "savory" does not really translate in French. The closest would be "salé" which means "salted". The "savory" word in opposition to "sweet" doesn't has an equivalent in French.