un carré is a square or something that is square-shaped.
It also means square in the Masonic sense - honest, straightforward, forthright.
fait un écart (push to the side) or: 'faute de carre' the 'carre' (fem.) is the metallic edge on each side of the sole of the snowboard. There is a heelside 'carre', and a toeside one. The names used in French are 'backside carre' and 'frontside carre'. Faute de carre That's when an edge (carre) of the snowboard touches the snow when it should not, often causing the snowboarder to fall. (ex: during a frontside turn, on the toes, if the heelside edge ('backside carre') touches the snow, this is called 'une faute de carre back'.
un carré - a square
the old (square) quarter
Car is a Late Middle English word, from the French carre and/or Latin carrum, carrus.
Antoine Carre died in 1885.
Barthelemy Carre has written: 'The travels of the Abbe Carre in India and the Near East, 1672 to 1674'
Vieux carre means "old square".
Carré is square in french and a square has four equal sides so it alo has four corners.
Denis Carre goes by Gangnam Denis.
Carre's Grammar School was created in 1604.
"Bonne carre" is a French term that translates to "good square" in English. It is often used in various contexts, including art and design, to refer to a well-proportioned or aesthetically pleasing square shape. In some specific contexts, it can also refer to a particular style or technique. The exact meaning may vary depending on the field in which it is used.
Michel Carre has written: 'Love by lantern-light'