bizarre means weird in English - and in French.
"The date for Homecoming" is the meaning of the phrase "homecoming beau."Specifically, the word "beau" comes from French. In French, it may be an adjective or a noun which characterizes a male as "beautiful, handsome." In English, one of its translations may include "date, person to go out with."
It's the same as English.
Gallic is not a language, it's an adjective meaning French.
New Brunswick is a bilingual province, meaning that we provide both French and English language services (seriously, there's French AND English on EVERY road sign in New Brunswick). So, no, we are neither French or English. We are both.
A French phrase for a couple who dates is un couple d'amoureux ("eh[n] koopl dah-moo-ruh").
Fier is the masculine adjective meaning 'proud' in English.
Pessimiste is a French adjective meaning 'pessimistic' in English.
beau is a (masculine) adjective meaning beautiful in French.
Vert, verte is an adjective meaning green in English.
e.g.azuréen(blue as the mediterraneansea)
The same as English, it's just pronounced differently.
Chaste is a cognate, and is exactly the same in French as it is English. An alternate meaning for the same adjective is "pur".
"Right" or "straight" as an adjective and "law" or "right" is an English equivalent of the French word droit. Context makes clear which meaning suits. Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "dwa" in French.
"Well" as an adverb and "fine, good" as an adjective are English equivalents of the French word bien. Whatever the context or meaning, the pronunciation remains "bya" in French.
"Checkmate!" in chess and "dull" generally are English equivalents of the French word mat. Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation of the adjective remains "maht" in French.
"Coming," "imminent," "impending," or "next" as an adjective and "neighbor" as a noun are English equivalents of the French word prochain. Context makes clear which meaning suits for the masculine singular adjective or noun. The pronunciation will be "pro-sheh" in French.
"Hilaire" is a French equivalent of the English name "Hillary."Specifically, the French and the English names trace their origins back to the Latin adjective "hilarius." The original meaning therefore is "cheerful." The pronunciation is "ee-lehr."