"I live on the street" is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'habite sur la rue. The declaration most commonly occurs in a conversation that continues to give the street's name or in a discussion that involves a domiciled individual who spends a lot of time outside or a homeless person. The pronunciation will be "zha-beet syoor la ryoo" in French.
"Sur quelle rue" means "on what street?" in English.
The French word "rue" translates to "street" in English.
feminine - la rue
la rue (fem.)
In French, "rue" is a feminine noun.
The French word "rue" (feminine noun) means "street" in English.The English words man/men are "homme/hommes" in French.
In French, 'Rue de la belle etoile' can be translated in English to:'The beautiful star street'
Ta mère est tombée dans la rue hier! in French is "Your mother fell in the street yesterday!" in English.
"Sur quelle rue" means "on what street?" in English.
The French word "rue" translates to "street" in English.
"What street do you live on?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tu habites dans quelle rue? The question translates literally as "You live in which street?" in English. The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-beet daw kel ryoo" in French.
"Street of the Lilacs" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Rue des Lilas. The phrase most famously references a road in the 19th arrondissement ("district") of Paris, France and a title by the Breton traditional music group Katé-Mé. The pronunciation will be "ryoo dey lee-la" in French.
la rue = the road
feminine - la rue
Une forge is the blacksmith's place, 'a forge' or 'smithy' in English. "Rue des forges" means 'forges street'.
"39, rue Ganneron" IS French!
"une rue" (fem.) is a street in French.