face is spelled "visage" in French. The word "face" is also used, but is less common.
"visage", "figure", "face", "gueule", "faire face Ã?" and "affronter"
Menton.
Commencer is the word for start in French.
"Rogue" is a french word borrowed into English. So the French word for "rogue" is "rogue".
Voyage IS an English word, as well as a French word.
The word for after in French is apres (with a slanted left downward accent on the e).
Visage is the French word for "face".
A person's face is 'visage' or 'figure'. An animal's face is 'face'.visage
Menton.
"En face de" in French means "opposite" or "across from". It is used to describe a location or direction of something in relation to another object or place.
Visage (French) Countenance (archaic)
The phrase 'vis-a-vis' is in French. It means face-to-face. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'vis' means 'face'. The preposition 'a' means 'to'.
The word facade (French façade) means a building front, or face. It is used metaphorically to mean an image presented that is not the true one, such as "a facade of innocence" or "his generosity was only a facade to cover his larcenous activities."
"Gesichtscreme" or maybe "Gesichtscrème" (as the french word crème is correct too)
"le visage" is a French word meaning "the face" in English
The word "facade" is borrowed from the French language. It originally comes from the Italian word "facciata," which means "frontage" or "face."
OK, it isn't viz a vi, it's vis a vis, and the word vis is an abbreviation of the French word visage, which means face, hence, vis a vis means face to face (with a also being French, and meaning to - I know it could be a bit confusing, since a is also an English word that means something completely different). Furthermore, the concept face to face is not meant literally, it is used metaphorically to mean, with regard to.
a smiling face is 'un visage souriant' a smiley (smiling yellow face used in internet messages) is commonly called a smiley in French. The official name is "une émoticone" (word formed from émotion + icône)