"Ryoo mo-tor-guy" is the way to pronounce the French phrase Rue Montorgueil.
the street is 'la rue' (fem.) in French
232 Rue Saint-Antoine was the Bastille, which was more of a powder-store than a prison (40 tons of gunpowder, only 7 prisoners).
No, she does not.
Eugene De Rue died on September 29, 1985, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Passez la pont et premiere rue a gauche. Cross the bridge and first on left. (By the way you'd be more likely to give directions during World War II, no signposts).
Rue- dee- crey- er
"Street of the Lilacs" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Rue des Lilas. The phrase most famously references a road in the 19th arrondissement ("district") of Paris, France and a title by the Breton traditional music group Katé-Mé. The pronunciation will be "ryoo dey lee-la" in French.
Rue-cuh
feminine - la rue
This phrase in French translates to "What street do you live on?" It is a way to ask someone about the street they live on.
"39, rue Ganneron" IS French!
"une rue" (fem.) is a street in French.
The French word "rue" translates to "street" in English.
la rue (fem.)
In French, "rue" is a feminine noun.
"What street do you live on?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tu habites dans quelle rue? The question translates literally as "You live in which street?" in English. The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-beet daw kel ryoo" in French.
EC-RUE-TEAK city