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if you mean the english word OR then it's ouif you mean the french word OR then it means gold
It stems from the French word "jour", which means "day".
Nault isn't a French word.
it's not French
The English word "tiz" is "c'est" in French.
mise à jour
The English translation of the French phrase "de jour" is "of the day" or "during the day." In French, "de" can mean "of" or "during," and "jour" translates to "day." So, when combined, "de jour" typically refers to something that occurs or is done during the daytime hours.
'jour' is the French word for 'day'
The word "day" in French is jour.
Bon Jour is French for "Good Day".
French
The word "day" in French is jour.
le jour means the day - de jour usually means during the day or in the daytime "la mot" is a mistake since "mot" is masculine. My guess is the intended phrase is le mot du jour which means the word of the day.
a day is translated "un jour" in French
you say "jour" for day
Quel jour sommes-nous? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "What day of the week is it?" The interrogative translates literally by word order into English as "What (which) day are we?" The pronunciation will be "kel zhoor suhm-noo" in French.
It's not a French word