les confiseurs
In French, the word "candy" is masculine and is translated as "bonbon."
Bonnet de Baton
Sweets, as in candy, would be 'des bonbons'.
The word candy originally comes from qand, the Persian word for "sugar cube." Some people think this word came to Persian from Sanskrit or a Sanskrit-derived language. We know it then went from Persian into Arabic as qandi, and eventually into French as sucre candi.
The french word candy Singular - Le bonbon/ Un bonbon/ Du bonbon Plural - Les bonbons/ Des bonbons Example J'aime manger des bonbons. I love/like to it candies.
we merge to the candy store
Late 13th Century from an Arabic word 'qandi' related to Persian 'qand' meaning cane sugar. Brought into old French as 'sucre candi' meaning sugar candy
To make is 'faire' in French. Link goes to conjugation.
A confectioner is someone who make gum and/or candy =)
Astuce ou bonbons :3 That is French for "trick or treat" or "trick or candy"
Candy is the root word
Perhaps you are referring to "bon bon"-- this is a small candy, usually covered with chocolate. The word comes from the French "bon"-- which means good. It referred to the fact that these candies tasted really good. Since the word is originally French in origin, I would imagine people in France call the candy "bon bons" just like Americans do; except in English, we pronounce the final -s of the plural, whereas in French, it is usually a silent letter.