here are some words: combat, format, mat, plat
"Joint" is an English equivalent of the French word bat. The masculine singular noun represents French Canadian slang. The pronunciation will be "ba" in French.
No, the word 'bat' is a concrete noun as a word for a winged mammal and as a word for a stout stick used to hit a ball; a word for a physical thing.
If you mean to pronounce it the English way, then no french word would do. If you mean to pronounce it the french way then any feminine form of an adjective ending with '-if' will do, like expressive, intensive, allusive, émotive, and so on
bat
It mean's BAT in Italian
batte de cricket
Crouton.
"Joint" is an English equivalent of the French word bat. The masculine singular noun represents French Canadian slang. The pronunciation will be "ba" in French.
"Bat" is a feminine word when translated from English to French. The feminine singular noun chauve-souris references the animal whereas the feminine singular nouns batte and raquette refer to the sports equipment. The respective pronunciations will be "shaov-soo-ree," "baht" and "ra-ket" in French.
plomb (lead)
In French, the word "douce" is feminine. This can be determined by looking at the ending of the word, with the "e" at the end indicating it is feminine. In French, nouns and adjectives have gender, with feminine words typically ending in "e" and masculine words often ending in consonants.
I don't know the word itself as a French word, but it must be something to do with happiness (felicite, in French). The 'a' ending almost suggests an Italian word.
how to say bat in french
le paridis in french means heaven
A different French word... :D You change the ending of a verb in the past tense.
The French word for "vampire' IS "vampire". It is a cognate. The only difference is the pronunciation, which is more like "vam-peer-ay". Example: Vampire bat in French is "souris vampire".
Cinq (five)