I don't think you would. It is not something the French would be inclined to eat.
Having said that, lava is "lave" in French, and cake is "gateaux." So maybe "lave-gateaux"?
Gateau. If you want to say 'cakes' that would be gateaux
Gâteau de bébé.
villeTo improve:la ville = the townune ville = a townyou always in french need and article (the, a) in front a noun.e.g. i will have a bit of cake (english) would be i will have a bit of the cake (french). even though that still make sense in english, i will have a bit of cake doesn't make sense in french.hope this helped
"le gâteau" means 'the cake'
Ladyfinger is called 'gombo' or sometimes 'okra' in French. As a tropical plant, it is better known in creole cooking recipes.A small sponge cake known as a ladyfinger is called a biscuit à la cuiller in French.
English= Lava French= Lave
Yes, it is typically served on French tables.
Gateau is food cake in french
You would say "Le sol est la lave" in French to express "The floor is lava."
gâteau
A birthday cake in French is 'un gâteau d'anniversaire'
A banana cake is "un gâteau à la banane" in French.
gâteau sucré
If you mean a slice of cake it is - tranche
gâteau basque.
acheter un gâteau
try making into lava cake