Hors d'oeuvre is the singular of the French phrase hors d'oeuvres.
Specifically, the prepositional phrase hors de* literally means "outside of". The masculine noun oeuvre literally means "work". The phrase loosely translates as "beyond (main) course" or "first course".
The pronunciation will be "or duhv" in the singular and plural.
*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by -- an apostrophe before a noun whose spelling begins with a vowel.
Tu as is singular is French. The plural French form is Vous êtes.
'la' is the definite (feminine, singular) article in French
"A melted (dish)" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase "une fondue."Specifically, the feminine singular indefinite article "une" means "a, one." The feminine noun "fondue" is formed from the feminine singular form of the past participle of the verb "fondre" ("to melt"). The phrase refers to a popular French food that includes cheese and is eaten melted.The pronunciation is "oon fohn-dyoo."
"Luh sah-vwahr" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le savoir.Specifically, the word le functions as an object pronoun in its masculine singular form. It means "it" in this context. The present infinitive savoir translates as "to know."
Deux nez is a French equivalent of the English phrase "two noses." The masculine noun shows the same form in the singular and in the plural. The pronunciation will be "duh ney" in French.
"That" is an English equivalent of the French word quel.Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an indefinite adjective. The feminine singular form is quelle. The pronunciation will be "kehl" in French.
Cinéma is the singular form of a masculine noun in French. The plural form is cinémas and may be translated as "films," "movie theaters" or "movies" in English. The pronunciation will be the same for the singular and the plural forms in French: "see-ney-ma."
'tu' is the familiar, singular form for 'you'. 'vous' is the plural or formal form.
Vous is the formal form of you, or its plural form. The casual and singular form of you is "tu".
Verb? If you mean noun... "you" in singular form is TU. in plural form it is VOUS.
The French imperative of "Live" to a single person is:vis (singular; familiar)vivez (singular; formal/polite)
The possessive form of the singular noun phrase is the lawyer's cases (the cases of the lawyer).The possessive form of the plural noun phrase is the lawyers' cases (the cases of the lawyers).