Fiance with one e (and an accent) is the masculine. Fiancee is the feminine, with an accent over the first e. I can't figure out how to type accents on windows, though :-/
There are two separate terms, and both are from the French words.The word fiance (fiancé) is a man engaged to be married (groom).The word fiancee (fiancée) is a woman engaged to be married (bride-to-be).*They are often distinguished in English pronunciation by stressing the 2nd syllable in fiance (fee-AHN-say) and the 3rd syllable in fiancee (fee-ahn-SAY).
Fiancee is a noun. It's the word used for a woman engaged to be married.
La exhalacion (accent on final 'o', which is also the primary accent)
Every place has an accent if you're not from that place.
You must mean French accent. Yes, voilàrequires an accent grave above the a.
It is an accent mark, it this case it's an E with an acute accent.
Most likely this is "Sí, mi novia es muy bonita. ¿Porqué?" That translates to : "Yes. My fiancee is very pretty. Why (do you ask)? Without the punctuation and accent it would be gibberish: If (my) fiancee is very pretty (because/why)
FIANCEE
Fiancee
The word Mexico does have an accent in Spanish, but not in English. There are no accents in English; the words in which we are used to seeing them (resume, fiancee) are actually words from other languages - usually French - that have been loaned into English. The word "Mexico" looks so similar in Spanish and English that I don't think it matters if you use the accent when writing in English.
no
Fiancee is feminine and fiance is masculine
I am so glad to be his fiancee.
A fiancee is the person that someone is engaged to, meaning they are going to marry him/her. For example, "My fiancee got me a beautiful ring".
The equivalent for the word "fiancee" in Tagalog language are "nobya", and "kasintahan".
There are two separate terms, and both are from the French words.The word fiance (fiancé) is a man engaged to be married (groom).The word fiancee (fiancée) is a woman engaged to be married (bride-to-be).*They are often distinguished in English pronunciation by stressing the 2nd syllable in fiance (fee-AHN-say) and the 3rd syllable in fiancee (fee-ahn-SAY).
The opposite of fiancee is fiance