That's news to me, I'm English, and no way am I French.
I'll just check again,...................nope still English.
Je m'ennuie! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I am bored!" The declaration also translates as "I become bored!" and "I get bored!" in English. The pronunciation will be "zhuh maw-nwee" in French.
Nunavut did not "become" French.French and English are Canada's official languages.According to Nunavut's Official Languages Act, the the Inuit (Inuktitut and Inuinnaqtun), English and French languages are the official languages within Nunavut.
Yes. New Zealand has Towns that are the result of French setlment at banks peninsula, accaroa.
Rugby is an English sport, developed at Rugby School, also played by the French
it came from the french word yatchét
Especially in the middle ages, the french and English peoples mixed together, and adopted words. The French have many cognates of English words, as we have french words. Particularly, England was once under a french ruler,(I forget the name), and during that time period many words were exchanged from language to language.
The English words 'I am fine, thank you' in informal French become Je vais bien merci.
Williams Officials Spoke French And So Named The Animals In Their Own French Language.
Cognates are words which are the same in English and French.
If you become an officer in the Canadian forces you must learn to speak French fluently, so yes, the navy would speak French as well as English.
Anglais is English in the French language.
"Feminity" in English is féminité in French.