The number 12 is douze in French. That's where English got the word dozen.
twelve - douze
twelve - douze
You say 'duodecimus'
to say meatballs in french you say: boulettes
12:30 = douze heures trente or midi trente or midi et demiat night = minuit trente or minuit et demi orzéro heure trente
'twelve' in french is 'douze'
Elle a douze ans.
j'ai douze ans
twenty-twelve (2012) is "deux-mille-douze" in french. I'm trying to figure out whether you can say "vingt-douze", which would be the literal translation of twenty-twelve, but it seems this is not something that translates directly.
J'ai douze ans.
"midi" is the commonest way of saying noon or midday in French. You can also say 'douze heures'.
Donc j'aurai bientôt 12 ans.
The anwer is, "douze".
"mon anniversaire est dans douze jours"
Soixante-douze Sixty-twelve. Silly, innit? In Canada, Switzerland and Belgium they say septante-deux, which makes sense, but tell that to the académie.
'twelve months' is translated 'douze mois' in French.
douze heures quinze -or- midi quinze -or- midi et quart.