'Flying saucer" is an English equivalent of "Soucoupevolante."
The feminine noun "soucoupe" means "saucer." Its singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "une" ("a, one"). The present participle "volante" in the feminine singular form means "flying."
Together, the pronunciation is "soo-koop voh-lawnt."
Translated from English to french, mad (English) is folle in French.
Été in French is "been" or "summer" in English.
Arobase in French means the typographical name for the "@" (at sign) in English.
go on google click on more at the top then click on translate french to English or English to french you could use that.
Depended on what country they were living in. French, French, English, English . But often educated/Noble English spoke French since William the Conquer was French and that carried on ( still does Elizabeth today has all her menus in French). This even carried over to the English colonies that educated men read/spoke French.
une soucoupe is a saucer in French. And une soucoupe volante is a flying saucer.
what is the flying saucer doing in the sky
Disque Soucoupe
"Soucoupe volante" is a French equivalent of 'flying saucer."The feminine noun "soucoupe" means "saucer." Its singular definite article is "la" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "une" ("a, one"). The present participle "volante" in the feminine singular form means "flying."Together, the pronunciation is "soo-koop voh-lawnt."
volante is an adjective meaning flying.
une sous-tasse (fem.) or une soucoupe (fem.)
une sous-tasse (fem.) or une soucoupe (fem.)
une tasse et une sous-tasse (or soucoupe)
une grenouille volante
"Flying saucer" is an English equivalent of "platillo volante."The Spanish word "platillo" means "little plate, saucer." Its singular definite article is "el" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "un" ("a, one"). The adjective "volante," from the present participle of the infinitive "volar," means "flying."Together, the pronunciation is "plah-TEE-yoh voh-LAHN-teh."
"Flying saucer" is an English equivalent of "Disco volante."The masculine noun "disco" literally means "disk." Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article "un, uno" ("a, one"). The adjective "volante," from the masculine/feminine singular form of the present participle of the infinitive "volare," means "flying."All together, the pronunciation is "DEE-skoh voh-LAHN-teh."
Disco Volante was created on 1995-10-10.