'lave' may be a form of the verb 'laver' (to wash) or 'se laver' (to wash oneself)
je me lave = I'm washing myself
elle lave la vaisselle = she's doing the dishes
If 'lave' is a noun, it means lava (the melted matter coming out of volcanoes)
"lave au poids" is a formula for a laundry, where it is offering to make you pay according to the weight of your laundry bag rather than on the number of items.
do you mean 'pont', which means 'bridge' in French?
food in french food in french
It's not French
In French it doesn't mean anything, but in Breton it means - dead.
... qui lave une fenêtre means '... who is washing a window' in French.
English= Lava French= Lave
French ironclad Lave ended in 1873.
You would say "Je me lave" in French, which translates to "I get washed."
éplucher is to peel vegetables or fruits; lave les fruits means 'wash the fruits' in French.
lave-vaisselle
That is the correct spelling of "lave tes mains" (Wash your hands, in French).
I don't think you would. It is not something the French would be inclined to eat. Having said that, lava is "lave" in French, and cake is "gateaux." So maybe "lave-gateaux"?
lave les fruits
It means to wash something.
"My mother is washing up" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ma mère se lave. The declaration translates literally as "My mother is washing herself" in English. The pronunciation will be "ma mehr suh lav" in French.
une main lave l'autre