office
bureau -- "bew-ro" -- desk; office
pay, salary
In English vernacular cash refers to money in the physical form of currency, such as banknotes and coins. The word "cash" comes from the modern French word caisse, which means (money) box.
At its start, the word employ was Middle English and spelled imploy which meant involved in or attached to. The word employ developed from the Middle English word imploy, the English word imply, and the Latin word implicate.
Cahier is a French word. It means notebook.
concubine
Bureau mean desk. I kno because I am from France.
Bureau is a French word which can mean office or desk. English meanings come from both. A bureau can be a department or ministry or other government office. (Think Federal Bureau of Investigation) A bureau can also be a piece of furniture, like a chest of drawers.
'Bureau' = office, or writing desk.
Un bureau (masc.) is a desk (like the teacher's desk) or the room that contains it (the office).
go jump off a cliff nobody wants you
It's not a French word
"terai" is not a french word.
if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
Yes, the word "bureau" is originally a French word. It means an office or a writing desk.
The French word "noisette" means "hazelnut" in English.
The French word "oui" (pronounced "we") translates to "yes" in English. The English word "we" translates to "nous" (pronounced "new") in French.
neither I think its neutral