A portmanteau of French and German is sometimes called "Franglais" or "Französisch." It refers to a combination of words, phrases, or elements from both languages.
allemand = German, les allemands = the Germans
Hello in French is "Bonjour", German is "Hallo", and Dutch is "Hallo" as well.
Switzerland is a country that speaks both German and French.
Switzerland (french: Suiesse, german: Schweiz, italian: Svizzera)
This is not French, but broken German. That would mean 'I don't speak German'. (It's not grammatical though, and should be "ich spreche kein Deutsch").
"German" in French is "Allemand".
Chiengorais a yarn or wool spun from dog hair. The word is a portmanteau of "chien", the French word for dog, and angora
its called portmanteau , meaning two words that have combined to make one. like ginormous > gigantic and enormous portmanteau is a french word. but used in English...hope that helps
German mean " allemand" in french
allemand = German, les allemands = the Germans
German!
French cuisine is obviously famous, varied, and creative. There is a popular joke involving German and French: "paradise is where the mechanics are German, and the cooks are French. Hell is the other way: the mechanics are French and the cooks are German"
the German assassin is " l'assassin allemand " in French.
Hello in French is "Bonjour", German is "Hallo", and Dutch is "Hallo" as well.
A neologism for a portmanteau created by incorrectly combining a malapropism with a neologism. It is itself a portmanteau of 'malapropism' and 'portmanteau'.A malamanteau is a neologism for a portmanteau created by incorrectly combining a malapropism with a neologism. It is itself a portmanteau.A word defined to infuriate Wikipedia editors
The German expressions for French fries arePommes frittesPommesorFritten
French and German are two different languages so no.