I'm not sure what a "mercy rule" is, but literally you might translate that as "une règle de pitié".
sounds like: ewn REG-luh duh pee-TYAY
Que Dieu me/vous pardonne
the man without mercy -> l'homme sans merci ("luhm sah[n] mare-see")
Misericordia=pity/mercy
Pardon! That actually is how to say pardon. =)
The French for thank-you is merci. (pronouced - mare-see)Merci is a French equivalent of 'Thank you'. As an interjection, it means 'Thank you'. As a feminine gender noun, it takes 'la' ['the'] as its definite article, and means 'mercy'.Thank you very much is 'merci beaucoup' (mer-sea bow-coo).Thank you in frensh is "Merci"
'No mercy' in French is 'pas de pitié'. An example sentence is 'sans pitié'. This means 'have no mercy'.
ils sont à sa merci If you type into google, 'they are at his mercy in french', then it gives you an accurate translation, in the search.
Que Dieu me/vous pardonne
I have read where there is a 30 point mercy rule in Pop Warner Flag Football. Also, where an 18 point rule was implemented in the 70s that stated once a team was up by 18+ points they had to change their starting backfield. I cannot say I am well versed with Pop Warner football but I would think there is a Mercy Rule somewhere in their rules. Whether it is a hard and fast rule or may be amended by each local chapter I cannot say.
"Mercy" is "pitié" in french. "No mercy !" = "Pas de pitié !"
Merci beaucoup. Pronounced: Mercy bo coo.
There isn't a mercy rule in the MLB because the score hardly ever gets that high.
Napolean ;D
the man without mercy -> l'homme sans merci ("luhm sah[n] mare-see")
la règle
Rule of evidence is règle de la preuve Rule of procedure is règle de la procédure
The "mercy rule" is only used in some leagues. There is no mercy rule in the MLB. My local Little League had a rule that if one team was up by more than 10 after the 4th inning, the game would be over and the team with the lead wins. ---------- 15 after 3 innings, 10 after 4 innings, and 8 after 5 innings is also a commonly used "mercy rule" in some leagues.