Much the same as in English. The French 'r' is sounded in the back of the throat.
In French, "Grace" is pronounced as "grahss." The emphasis is on the second syllable, and the "r" sound is soft and not pronounced as strongly as in English.
In French, trombone is also called "trombone." The word is pronounced similarly to the English term.
Culture. (it is spelled the same as English)
In French, "Troy" is pronounced as "twah." The "r" is not pronounced as strongly as in English, and the emphasis is on the last syllable.
They picked up Sacajawea.
Letters are the same in English and French, they're just pronounced differently.
in French you spell 'mariage' with a single 'r'. In English it is spelled 'marriage' (double 'r')
"Baileys" in French is the same as "Baileys" in English : a trademark © R&A Bailey & Co. 2009
Renoir is pronounced with the 'r' sound at the end because it is a French name, and in French, the pronunciation of certain consonants can differ from English. The 'r' in "Renoir" is pronounced more softly than in English and is part of the typical phonetic structure of French names. Additionally, the final 'r' reflects the original pronunciation and maintains the name's cultural and linguistic authenticity.
Much the same as in English. The French 'r' is sounded in the back of the throat.
The word for father in french is "père," which is pronounced effectively the same as the english word "pear" -- that is, pehr with the eh the same value as the word "eh?" But the r is a French r, which uh, is hard to describe in words. Go find someone saying it on youtube and try to mimic them.
In French, "Grace" is pronounced as "grahss." The emphasis is on the second syllable, and the "r" sound is soft and not pronounced as strongly as in English.
they came from France, some of their songs have English & french lyrics in them BUT they r still from France =]
Je t'aime is a French phrase, when translated to English it means I like you or I love you. Je in French means I and t'aime in French means love or like another person.
Culture. (it is spelled the same as English)
In French, trombone is also called "trombone." The word is pronounced similarly to the English term.