"Pouce" is the French word for thumb
Well You Say "pouce"Pouce is a masculine word, so le pouce or un pouce.
"Le pouce" in French translates to "the thumb" in English.
"Thumb" in French is "pouce."
"Word" in French is "mot" pronounced "moh"
The French word for French is "français."
No, "pouce" is the French word for thumb. "Pollice" is not a French word.
Well You Say "pouce"Pouce is a masculine word, so le pouce or un pouce.
"Le pouce" in French translates to "the thumb" in English.
The Maori word for thumb is kōnui.
The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".The Latin word for thumb is "pollex" you can also use "digitus".
"Thumb" in French is "pouce."
thumb tack already is an English word.
The Latin word for "thumb" is pollex (-icis, m.).
thumb nail, thumb tack, thumb screw, thumb print
This is an urban legend. There was no such law. The phrase "rule of thumb" comes, rather, from the time-honored practice of using the thumb to make rough measurements (think "rule" as in "ruler"). In some languages, in fact, the word for "inch" is the same as the word for "thumb" (e.g., French pouce) or is derived from it (e.g. Spanish plugada, from pulgar).
The phrase is "to thumb ones nose at".
The word parfum is of French origin, so it follows French pronunciation rules. The word is pronounced just like it is spelled, which is "par-fum." "Fum" rhymes with the English word "thumb."