A travers la scene sans peine
What does the word effortlessly mean
The final scene can be called the denouement.
Effortlessly, I used eight words in this sentence.Seemingly effortlessly, I served enchiladas right after soup.
The dog sailed effortlessly over the fence; and was gone in an instant. Our team seemed to win the match effortlessly.
They call a nativity scene "une crèche" (fem. - literally "a crib").
Similar to massage, but with a dr in front. The word 'dressage' is a French word that means 'training' or "breaking in" (i.e. training the horse to respond effortlessly to the rider's commands.)
The only real link is that they are both old forms of French. The root words that they were originally from came from Latin and Greek. Science is Old French, and from the Latin word scientia. Scene is Middle French, and from the Greek word skene.
In French, the word "travers" translates into the word "through" in English.
easily effortlessly
effortlessly
A homophone for scene is:seen
Yes. It started in Latin, but came into English usage through the French language.