projets
What was the French "Plan 17".
Plan 17 was the French battle plan should they wind up at war against Germany. The plan called for more artillery and infantry, working closer together. Unfortunately, the French did not use their artillery properly, or even bother to do any reconnaissance. As a result, within a matter of weeks the Germans had knocked the French back to their starting points, gaining a lot of territory along the way.
In order to say worker in French, you would say, travailleur. If you wanted to say boss in French you would say, patron.
Albany Plan of Union
Plan seventeen was a plan used in World War I. It was the French battle plan. The French were feeling resentful towards the German because of the Prussian war forty years prior. The Prussians, now Germans, had taking the provinces of Alsace and Lorraine from the French. The French planned to take them back. Plan seventeen involved an all out attack on Alsace and Lorraine by soldiers who fought fast and deadly, no matter the odds. They wanted to win back their lost provinces. Unfortunately, the plan failed and the French retreated to stop the Germans attacking in the Schlieffen Plan.
Plan d'Affaires
Town plan translates to French as 'plan de la ville'
un plan fantastique
Quel est votre plan d'etude
Un plan de Paris.
a metro map is "un plan du métro" in French.
il envisage de faire
Translating the word "plan" is quite difficult as, of course, it can have multiple meanings. Generally, if it is a noun, "prévu" is often used, and if it is a verb, then "planifer", "organiser" and "préparer" are usually used. See the related links for a better translation.
An airplane is un avion -- "ah-vyoh[n]" A geometric plane is un plan -- "plah[n]"
simple - ordinaire - claire No its plaine just add the e and say plane i mean plan e the E is like a
l'arrière-plan (masc.) or 'le contexte' (masc. - for abstract or conceptual things)
"front elevation" is "plan de façade principale" in French architecture. "plan de façade" is any elevation drawing, "plan de façade arrière" is for the back elevation, "plan de façades latérales" or "plan de pignons" is for the sides. "Plan de façade gauche" is for the left side, "droite" for the right side.