CORRECTED: side to the; you must mean aux cote... to the side
"Aux" is a contraction in French that combines the preposition "à" (to, at) with the definite article "les" (the). It is used before a plural noun to mean "to the" or "at the."
Another word for "pass" in French is "traverser" or "passer".
"J'ai mal aux oreilles" means "I have earache" in English.
"Je vis aux Philippines"
'aux' is the plural form of 'à' which includes the definite article, so it means 'to the/at the'. eg - La boutique se trouve aux Champs-Elysées (because les Champs-Elysées is plural and it begins with 'les') or je m'en vais aux champs - I'm going away to the fields - ça appartient aux filles - that (object) belongs to the girls.
aux cartes = maps
Une bille is a marble Jouer aux billes : to play marbles
"Aux" is a contraction in French that combines the preposition "à" (to, at) with the definite article "les" (the). It is used before a plural noun to mean "to the" or "at the."
My wife is French, she tells me it is "Balle aux Prisonniers."
It's French.
a thief is "un voleur" in French Children play police and thieves = les enfants jouent aux gendarmes et aux voleurs
"At the races" is an English equivalent of the French phrase aux courses.Specifically, the word auxcombines the preposition Ã? ("at, to") and the feminine/masculine plural definite article les ("the") to mean "at the" in this context. The feminine noun coursestranslates as "races." The pronunciation will be "oh koorss" in French.
Another word for "pass" in French is "traverser" or "passer".
The word "jouer" in French usually means "to play," while the word "avec" means "with." Put the two together, and you get "to play with."
Aux in french means 'to the'. AUX in either french or English stands for auxiliary/ auxiliaire.
This is the word for chocolate muffins i think muffins aux pepites de chocolat
aux: to the