boulevard, questionnaire, queue, restaurant, garaje, to cease, coup d'etat... Hundreds more!
Italian, French and Spanish are the only ones I know of. There are also English words with Latin origins but the English language does not come from Latin. Also Portuguese and Romanian.
uuh, haha i can speak english, SOME french, and i know a couple words in greek and arabic. (: but why would you want to know that? x)
When the Normans came to England in the Eleventh Century, French became the dominant language in the courts of England and elsewhere. Eventually it merged with the pre-existing English. Hence modern English has many words derived from Frenh.
I don't know the full meaning but I know that it can mean 'introduce', but many French words have more than one meaning.
"Je connais" in French translates to "I know" in English.
I only know one: supplementaries
Not fluently, but on iCarly, Freddie says Spanish words in most episodes!
The words in the dictionary are in there to make a note of all words that are spoken so if you do not know what they mean you can look them up. They come from the English Language :)
Italian, French and Spanish are the only ones I know of. There are also English words with Latin origins but the English language does not come from Latin. Also Portuguese and Romanian.
Life In Mono - Mono. It's on Pure Moods or Great Expectations.
There is no definitive answer to this question, it is difficult to decide what is 'English', there are Latin words used in Law and French words used in cooking. However there is a dictionary know to contain 171,416 words in current use and 47,156 obsolete words. All in all there may be 250,000 words available in English.
uuh, haha i can speak english, SOME french, and i know a couple words in greek and arabic. (: but why would you want to know that? x)
will know or would know
As many as possible; the more you know the better. Or just 9: "I do not speak French. Do you speak English?"
When the Normans came to England in the Eleventh Century, French became the dominant language in the courts of England and elsewhere. Eventually it merged with the pre-existing English. Hence modern English has many words derived from Frenh.
The same as anyone who can translate from any language to another. You have to know both languages well enough that you know what words and phrases are equivalent from one to the other. That knowledge can come from growing up in a bilingual household, or from studying a language in school and practicing speaking it.
the word means snail in English and i would know that because i speak french