If you mean the honey made by bees, the word is miel. If you mean the word you might call someone you love, it is chéri or chou.
Marissa in French means Honey Suckle it is for those of you who don't know is a sweet flower in which you can drink/eat the honey.
masculine- 'avec mon cheri' or feminine- 'avec ma cherie'
Collective nouns for honey are a comb of honey or a jar of honey.
Je t'aime, mon chéri (if it is a man)or ma chérie (If it is a woman)You can translate 'honey' with a lot of expressionslikemon sucre d'orge (my barley sugar)mon amour (my love)But the literal translation of honey (miel in French) is not used as a kind word for someone.
honey is "le miel" in French. the honeymoon = la lune de miel
Chérie / chéri means 'beloved' in French. It is used as a pet name, in the sense of 'honey'
It is of Greek origin, and the word means 'honey bee'.
"chérie" is pronounced "sha-ree" in French
miel
The Swahili word for "Honey" is "asali".
Granola as a loan word and musli as a Swiss French-/German-influenced word are French equivalents of the English word "granola." The respective pronunciations of the masculine singular noun -- which references a crisply baked concoction of honey, oats, nuts (and sometimes puffed rice) -- will be "gra-no-la" and "myoo-slee" in French.
Mil is the Irish translation for honey