As a piece of furniture, 'une commode' is a chest of drawers. As an adjective, commode means 'practical, easy to use'
drawers are "les tiroirs" in French. A drawer chest is 'une commode'
Generally we refer to the English spoken in the British Isles as "British English," but the distinction could be made between various forms of it: Irish English, Scottish English and English English.
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
Literature in English is the writing written in English, but English in literature is the overall English literature that there is in the general category of "literature."
At secondary school there was English language and English literature. English language was punctuation etc. English literature was popems, stories etc.
'une commode' is a chest of drawers.
Dresser in french is commode!
This is becasuse of shape of commode. The lower part has a upward bend which does not allow the commode to go empty. Only water which has a prresure can go over the bend and moment the presurre is stopped, the last portion of water can not climb the full bend and therfore remain at the bottm of commode.
a toilet
No.
You can find pictures of a commode by browsing the sites listed in the "Related Links" section of this answer.
The Latin equivalent of the English phrase 'aging comfortably' is the following: commode senescens. The word 'commode' is an adverb that means 'appropriately, fitly, properly, or rightly'. But it also can mean 'comfortably, pleasantly' and even 'kindly'. The word 'senescens' means 'growing old'.
The word "commode" originated from the French word "commode," which means convenient or suitable. It was first used in the 17th century to refer to a piece of furniture with drawers or shelves for storing personal items.
Thomas Elkins
commode.
it is commode
I have a 1964 eljer commode that needs a new flapper,where can I find one, its the ball it need 1.75 inches and the flush valve is part of the tank so help.where can I find a flapper for this commode?