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.
To understand is 'comprendre' in French. The conjugation is in link.
If you spoke French in Russia, most of the people would not understand a word you said. Unless they also spoke French.
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.
"Understand" in French is spelled as "comprendre."
comprendre (verb) is "to understand" in French.
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.
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.