formal- comprendez (pronounced com-prend-ay)
informal- compreds (com-prend)
What is the french word french of Jack ? the french word for Jack its Jacques .
No, bonchule isn't a word in french...but "bonchure" is a word in french
The word from French is negligee, which is negligée in French.
Gourmet IS a French word.
octobre is the French word for October.
We don't understand this question. Jacqueline is a french name.
"Koné" in French is a slang term used to mean "to know" or "to understand". It is a variation of the word "connaître" which means "to know" in standard French.
If you spoke French in Russia, most of the people would not understand a word you said. Unless they also spoke French.
To understand is 'comprendre' in French. The conjugation is in link.
No, the word 'understand' is a verb: to know what someone or something means; to know how someone feels; to have heard or read something; comprehend, realize, grasp. Example sentence:I understand some French but I don't speak it at all.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. Example:I understand some French but I don't speak itat all. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'French' in the second half of the sentence)
tu piges? - means do you understand? in French slang. Cinquante piges means fifty years - also in French slang.
The French word entente means an understanding and comes from the verb entendre, to hear, to understand. This is similar to the idea of a "special relationship" between the UK and the USA; not an alliance but an informal understanding of mutual support.The French word for a formal alliance is . . . alliance.
"Understand" in French is spelled as "comprendre."
comprendre (verb) is "to understand" in French.
I do not understand is 'je ne comprends pas' in French.
We do not understand is 'nous ne comprenons pas' in French.
If you wanted to speak of brotherly/sisterly sentiments in French, the adjective "fraternel / fraternelle" would be used. They come from the Latin word fratria used to speak of siblings (boys and girls alike).Technically, a French adjective related to the word "soeur" (sister) is the word "sororel" which shares the same roots as "sister" or "sorority". Absolutely nobody will understand it.