Pretty much. It means "white or blank paper".
Presumably you mean slaked lime? If so it is calcium hydroxide - Ca(OH)2
There are lots of types of metamorphic rock, some examples are:-MarbleSlateschistgneiss
It means the lady uses Feminine cleaners properly fro that FRESH all over feeling
You might mean "clean lines" which means without frills or ornamentation when describing a car or a piece of clothing. Or maybe you mean "cleanliness" which is the state of being clean. Better spelling would result in better understanding.
This line is from the book "Anne of Green Gables" by Lucy Maud Montgomery. It describes a scene where the character Anne Shirley gets so frustrated with Gilbert Blythe that she hits him over the head with her slate.
"Carte blanche" is a blank check, that is an unlimited authorization.
"Carte blanche" is a blank check, that is an unlimited authorization.
"Carte" is roughly similar to "card" in English. "La carte" has the following meanings: 1. A sheet of paper (as in "carte blanche") 2. A map or chart 3. A playing card 4. A calling card, business card, postcard, ticket, piece of ID etc. 5. A restaurant menu or wine list (as in "à la carte")
Yes, it can be. But normally the adverb is cleanly. Colloquially, clean may be misused to mean "cleanly."However, it can be used to mean "until clean" and is an adverb in these cases.Examples:"wipe the slate clean""scrub the floor clean""wash the dishes clean"
une carte de fidélité is the loyalty card
"carte noire" means 'black card' in French. This is a coffee brand also.
This idiom means to confess and admit to whatever you have done wrong - to start over with a clean slate.
"carte noire" means 'black card' in French. This is a coffee brand also.
une carte is a map in French. Or it may be a card (playing card)
"changement de carte-mère" means "motherboard change" (in computers) in English.
La carte des mets is the menu. "Mets' is a (somewhat snobbish) noun for a dish.
a map