french word
'Miedo' is from the Spanish language. It is a masculine noun and it translates to mean fear. 'Dar miedo' means to frighten but 'de miedo' means brilliant or great.
Parole is the French word for speech. Ferdinand de Saussure used the word parole to mean the individual speech acts of a person, or the individual's own speech. He used the word langue, which means language, to mean the larger, more impersonal idea of language as a whole.
No, the word, boosjy, is not a word in the English language. Any word that is in the English language can be found in the dictionary.
The word alkali come from the language Arabic
The word prevodi is from the Slovenian language. Using the website of Google Translate is seems to deem it as the word "translations" in the English language.
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The word "de facto" is of Latin origin. It translates to "in fact" in English and is used to refer to something that exists or is done in practice, even if not necessarily recognized formally.
"De taalvoorkeuren" in Dutch translates to "language preferences" in English. It refers to the favored or preferred languages of someone or a group.
De-inhibition, is widely used in the English language but has no dictionary definition as it is not a real word.
The phrase "esprit de corps" is French. It translates to "spirit of the group" and refers to the sense of unity and camaraderie within a group or organization.
De Luxe (of luxury) has been taken into the English Language from the French language
"Unstress" is not a widely-recognized word in standard English dictionaries, but it can be considered a colloquial or informal term meaning to remove or reduce stress or pressure. It is not commonly used in formal writing.
"de crypt" is probably another word for "decode"--to translate a coded word or message into understandable text; a language you understand. To unscramble. To "figure out."
G. Lavis has written: 'Les chansons de Moniot d'Arras' -- subject(s): Concordances, Indexes, Language, Word frequency 'Les chansons de Moniot de Paris' -- subject(s): Concordances, Indexes, Language, Word frequency
In Italian, "lucky" is translated as "fortunato".
Cobra comes from the Portuguese word cobra (de capello) =snake (with a hood), from Latin colubra =snake
The word cul-de-sac originates from the French language and it literally means ''the ass of the bag'' which basically means the bottom of the bag but ''cul'' in french is the vulgar way of saying bum.The French do not use the word cul-de-sac.