Dure (feminine adjective - the masculine is dur) means hard in French.
If you mean the Republic of Guinea (which used to be called French Guinea), it is in Africa.If you mean French Guiana, it is in South America.
In French, "notre" means "our" in English.
"Les pierres" is a French term that translates to "the stones" in English.
It means veda.
Naissance means birth.
Tête dure in French means "hard head" about a stubborn person in English.
dur, dure
(il) travaille dure
The feminine word for "dur" in French is "dure."
dur (masc.) dure (fem.)
You say 'it lasts for' in French: 'Il dure pour' x
que ça dure pour toujours
I am going to venture it comes from the French "tête dure", meaning strong head, stubborn.
Stone: pierre Thick head: tête dure
dur / dure is the French adjective for hard.
"tête dure" = "hard head" literally, but is never used on its own. "avoir la tête dure" = "to be stubborn", someone who doesn't change opinion even if you hit him on the head repeatedly (hence the hard head)
The life of the party is "le boute-en-train".