Deux heures, trente (2:30)
"Il est deux heures et demie" in French means "It is two thirty," referring to the time being half past two o'clock.
Trente-quatre Trente-cinq Trente-six Trente-sept Trente-huit Trente-neuf
Thirty-nine point two
Thirty-two and twenty-six.
7.32 = Seven and thirty-two hundredths.
fearson
trente deux
Thirty in french is trente
64,000
deux heurs thrente.
Thirty in French is "Trente" pronounced "tront"
"Il est deux heures et demie" in French means "It is two thirty," referring to the time being half past two o'clock.
Its a reference to the time you need to leave. Two thirty is a way of saying 2:30, or half past two.
No, two thirty in the afternoon is not a measure of relative time; it is a specific point in time on the clock. Relative time refers to the perception of time that can vary based on context, such as how long something feels or the duration between events. Two thirty can be understood in relation to other times, but it itself is an absolute measure.
The time 'two-thirty and thirty-five seconds' would be written: 2:30:35.
Thirty
the time? 4:35 à quatre heures trente-cinq