there is NO circumflex in the French word 'hache'; if you find one, it is a misspelling.
The French word for island is " île " (it is spelled with the circumflex mark over the I).
The accents in the French word "frère" are the circumflex accent on the first e: ê.
No, the word "hommage" does not have any grammatical accents in French. It is written as "hommage" without any accents.
August is spelled août, or aout, (pronounced "oot") in French. The simpler spelling "aout" without the circumflex, is the one now taught in schools.
The circumflex accent (in French: l'accent circonflexe) is the accent shaped like a little roof, that you find for instance in 'forêt'. It often replaces a "s" that has been dropped from the word: forêt was formerly written forest, hôpital was written hospital, and so on.
est The verb Etre Etre: to be (the E in Etre has a circumflex over it) Je suis (I am) Nous sommes (we are) Tu es (You are) Vous etes (You, Plural or formal are). Circumflex over the E Il/Elle est (he/she is) Ils/Elles sont (they are) Depends on the context. To say It is, you'd say "Il est..."
The proofreading symbol that looks like a circumflex is called a caret. It is used to indicate where an additional or corrected word should be inserted in a text.
Sur means over in French.
You can use a circumflex accent in a sentence to denote a missing letter, such as in the word "c^te" to represent "côte." It can also indicate a historical change in the word's spelling, like in "forêt" compared to “forest.” Additionally, the circumflex accent can signal a distinction in pronunciation, like in "du" (of the) and "dû" (due).
It is written the same, but that there is a circumflex, ^, over the 'o' (signifying a missing letter 's'; cf relationship with English 'hostel') The 'h' is not pronounced; the remainder of the word 'AUtel'. However, usually a definite ('le'; abbreviated here to 'l' because of the vowel in the word's first syllable) or indefinite ('un') article is needed in French. For these, because of so-called 'liaison' (word-fusion), the pronunciation becomes: 'l'hotel' (lawTELL) or 'un hotel' (a nawTELL)
The accent you're referring to is likely the "ô," which features a circumflex accent (^) over the letter "o." This accent is commonly found in French and some other languages, indicating a change in pronunciation or a historical alteration in the spelling of a word. In French, for example, it often indicates a vowel sound that is longer or more closed than the standard "o."
Etain There is an accent over the e