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if it's a number: sept virgule quinzeif it's time: sept heures quinze, sept heures un quart
7:30
"Il est sept heures moins trente-neuf" means "it's 39 minutes before 7'oclock" or literally "It is 7 hours minus 39" or "Il est six heures vingt-et-un" is "It's 21 minutes after 6" or literally "It is 6 hours 21" Written its: 7h21 The above answers are for a a.m. p.m. scale (put a.m. or p.m. after the 7h21 or say "le matin" for "in the morning" or "l'apres-midi" for "in the afternoon" depending on if it's a.m. or p.m. (I'm not sure if that's completely factual though). Know, with the 24-hour clock (p.m.'s add 12 hours to what their a.m. counter-part was), if it's a.m. it stays the same but if it's p.m. it becomes: "Il est dix-neuf (19, 7+12) heures moins trente-neuf " and "Il est dix-huit (18, 6+12) heures vingt-et-un"
"Middle English" is a subset of English. Middle English is the type of English spoken in Chaucer's time, as in _The Canterbury Tales_. English is a language as a whole, but over time, the dialect has changed from Old English, the dialect spoken in _Beowulf_, to Middle English, the dialect spoken in Chaucer's time, in _The Canterbury Tales_, to Modern English, the dialect spoken in Shakespeare's time, in _Hamlet_, to today's English, the dialect I'm writing in right now.
Time to say goodbye (english only)
It's nine-fifteen (time)
"Il est neuf heures" in French translate to "It is nine o'clock".
deux heures quarante cinq / trois heures moins le quart
9: neuf55 : cinquante-cinq955: neuf cent cinquante-cinq9:55 neuf heures cinquante-cinq
huit heures et quart
19h30 = written dix-neuf heures trente = spoken French times are like military time, with h (heures) put after the hour.
it's fifteen past ten.
if it's a number: sept virgule quinzeif it's time: sept heures quinze, sept heures un quart
I'm leaving Paris at 9:20, what time do I arrive in Calais
"Deux heures moins le quart" is a French equivalent of the English time phrase "Quarter to two."Specifically, the number "deux" means "two." The feminine noun "heures" means "hours." The preposition "moins" means "less, minus." The masculine singular definite article "le" means "the." The masculine noun "quart" means "quarter."The pronunciation is "duh-zuhr mweh luh kahr."
7:30
French uses the word heure (hour) when referring to the time of day. So you do not ask about the time, you ask "what hour is it?" To ask what time it is: quelle heure est-il? To say "it's one o'clock": Il est une heure. To say "in the morning": du matin. To say "in the afternoon" de l'après-midi. To say "at night": de la nuit. However, usually instead of saying "in the morning" or "in the afternoon", French speakers will normally use 24-hour time. For example trente heures (13 h) means one pm. "Half past one" is une heure et demi (written 1 h 30). "Quarter past one" is une heure et quart or une heures et quinze (1 h 15). "Quarter to two" is deuze heures moins quart, or une heure quarante-cinq, or deuze heures moins quinze, all of which are written 1 h 45.Une heure: one o'clock (written 1 h)deux heures: two o'clock (2 h) trois heures: three o'clock (3 h) quatre heures: four o'clock (4 h) cinq heures: five o'clock (5 h)six heures: six o'clock (6 h)sept heures: seven o'clock (7 h)huit heures: eight o'clock (8 h) neuf heures: nine o'clock (9 h) dix heures: ten o'clock (10 h)onze heures: eleven o'clock (11 h) midi: midday, twelve pmminuit: midnight, twelve am.