There is a verb in french, which doesn't have an exact conjugation, ie. It is made by a combination of verbs and nouns, I call such verbs for the sake of this answer, 'combination verbs'. The english word for this verb is 'To bake' and the french equivalent is, 'Faire cuire au four', in which, 'Faire cuire' collectively mean 'To cook' and 'Au four' collectively mean the 'preposition + article + noun' - 'In the oven', therefore the literal meaning of the phrase is, 'To cook in the oven' equivalent to 'To bake'. Ya!! The meaning is simple but the usage is a little complicated.
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It's pretty simple; Bake with an accent over the e
A "Chef" (origin: French)
'to bake' in french is 'cuire'
The word bake has one syllable.
the bakery is 'la boulangerie' in French.
to bake (verb) = backe
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
The word bake is a verb (bake, bakes, baking, baked) and a noun (bake, bakes). Examples: Verb: We're going to bake some clams. Noun: Are you coming to the clam bake?
The present participle of bake is baking.
The future perfect tense of baked is will have baked.The future tense of the word is bake... "I will bake a pie in a minute"
it should say how long on a French's fried onion canister