The word "garage" is used in all English speaking countries as a building for housing a motor vehicle or vehicles or a place where motor vehicles are repaired, serviced, refueled or as a style of music subculture. The word has french and german origins.
Garage is derived from the word garer, a word from the French language.
France.
No, the word "garage" is not an adverb.The word "garage" is a noun. It is sometimes, but not often, also used as a verb.Click here to see a dictionary entry for "garage".
From French garage, from garer ("'to shelter'").
It is French in origin it meas to shelter.
The noun 'garage' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a building used to shelter or repair motor vehicles; a word for a thing.The word 'garage' is also a verb: garage, garages, garaging, garaged.
It came from France
Yes, "garage" is a French word. It is commonly used in English and other languages to refer to a building or space used for parking vehicles or storing equipment.
The position that can safely be used if the car is parked in a closed garage.
It is of French origin meaning 'a place to shelter a car'. Derives from the word 'garer' meaning to shelter and also dock ships. Garage came into use about 1902
The word "garage" comes from the French word "garer," which means "to shelter" or "to protect." It was first used in the late 19th century to refer to a building or space where automobiles were kept or stored.
There is no re in garage. -Age is the suffix in the word.