cognat
It comes from the Latin regere (to rule) or regnare (to reign) or regula (a rule) or another cognate form.
letter
Mittel is direct cognate with the English word 'middle'. They also sound the same, though mittel sounds harder.
do you mean 'pont', which means 'bridge' in French?
food in french food in french
The French word moustache is a cognate and means mustache.
It is a cognate, in French: irrésistible.
The cognate for English "old" in Spanish is "viejo" and in French is "vieux".
"Un repas" is French for "a meal". "Repas" is a cognate of the English word "repast".
Poison in French is exactly equivalent to its English cognate, poison.
Cognate as an adjective will be translated by apparantéUn cognat is a member of the family - linked by birth (rarely used except in Law )Un cognat is also, in Linguistics, a word which as a same origin than another word in another language.
In French, train is a cognate and is said and spelled the same as in English, train.
It is a cognate [a word that looks the same in French as in English]: "créations."
Yes, I think so Zebra in french is zebre with a accent on the first e
r-u-d-e. it's cognate.
a fedora is called 'un chapeau mou' or 'un feutre mou' in French.
A cognate, in French, or any other language, is a word that shares common meaning and etymological roots between two languages. The common root is usually seen in similar spellings and pronunciations, in this case between English and French. For example, the cognate word "table" is spelled the same in both English and French. They both share roots in Old French, ultimately come from the same Latin word, tabula, meaning board. The words for duck (English, of germanic origin) and canard (French, of latin origin) are not cognate, and sound obviously different due to their dissimilar roots. Beware of loan words, however. Some words, like facade, or cafe, are borrowed terms from the French language, and as such have no true English equivalent and are not cognate.