The plural form of "glace" in French is "glaces."
The only correct plural for French is French. "Frenches", as you say, or 'Frenchies' is a derogatory slang term.
"The ice" in English translates to "la glace" in French which means that it is feminine.
Maître des is the spelling of the plural of the French phrase maître de. The masculine noun and preposition translate into English as "master of" in the singular and "masters of the" in the plural. The pronunciation will be "met duh" in the singular and "met dey" in the plural in northerly French and "meh-truh duh" and "meh-truh dey" in southerly French.
That is the French spelling (langues) of the plural noun meaning languages.
The correct spelling of Philippines in French is "Philippines."
The only correct plural for French is French. "Frenches", as you say, or 'Frenchies' is a derogatory slang term.
"The ice" in English translates to "la glace" in French which means that it is feminine.
escaliers (often plural)
glace an ice cream - une glace
Fire - Le feuIce - Glace
the spelling
The correct spelling is "hors d'œuvre" -- this is the French word for "appetizer."
The correct spelling of the plural noun is hors d'oeuvres(French term meaning appetizers).
glace
Maître des is the spelling of the plural of the French phrase maître de. The masculine noun and preposition translate into English as "master of" in the singular and "masters of the" in the plural. The pronunciation will be "met duh" in the singular and "met dey" in the plural in northerly French and "meh-truh duh" and "meh-truh dey" in southerly French.
The spelling of the plural noun from French is hors d'oeuvres (aw-dervz), meaning appetizers.
The US spelling (plural) is hors d'oeuvres (appetizers, from the French).