Hors d'oeuvres are snack-size foods dispayed on a tray, meant for an appitizer, at dinner parties and such.
In English, hors d'oeuvres is the plural and the singular is hors d'oeuvre.un hors-d'oeuvre, pl. des "hors-d'oeuvre". The word is invariable in French; only the determiner is changed to plural.In multiple part words, verbs, adverbs and prepositions do not change. Nouns can take the plural mark, or not depending of the sense of the word. EX: "une pomme de terre, des pommes de terre" because one or many potatoes always come from the ground.a number of examples in the short linked article (in French)
Dehors is not Latin; it is French and means outside, out of doors
The correct spelling is hors d'oeuvres (plural).The singular hors d'oeuvre exists in English, and it is the Frenchfor either singular or plural uses.
The French (singular and plural) is hors d'œuvre; in English, the œ ligature is usually replaced by the digraph "oe" with the plural often written as "hors d'oeuvres".
hors d'oevres
The correct spelling is hors d'oeuvres. (plural)(In French hors d'oeuvre / hors d'œuvre is both singular and plural.)
Hors d'oeuvre = ôr dûrvzsee following link : hors-d-oeuvre
The duration of Hors Saison is 1.58 hours.
hors d'oeuvre(ôr dûrv)n. pl. hors d'oeuvres (ôr dûrvz) or hors d'oeuvre - An appetizer served before a meal.[French hors d'uvre : hors, outside + de, of + uvre, (the main) work.]
Hors d'oeuvres is the English plural, hors d'oeuvre is the English singular. Hors d'œuvre is the French plural and the French singular.
The correct spelling is hors d'oeuvres (plural).The singular hors d'oeuvre exists in English, and it is the French spelling for either singular or plural uses. The English pronunciation is (aw-dervz).
In English the spelling is hors d'oeuvre (singular) and hors d'oeuvres (plural), meaning appetizers.In French, the spelling (singular and plural) is hors d'œuvre.