un chat indolent/paresseux
paresseux
sweat and its feminine
Same as in regular French..."paresseux" masculine or "paresseuse" feminine. I grew up hearing my grandmother say it all the time. There's not much of a difference between regular French and "Cajun" French. It all came from France, a very small bit of it got changed through the years, but it is still almost all the same. The only people I know of who speak it are the really old folks who are still living. Probably just better off studying regular French, it's almost the exact same. I was asking my grandmother how to say everyday words and she told me everything I asked her exactly the same as in regular French with the exception that she called a cookie "ti gateau" and when pronouncing the word for "something" she pronounced it "cake shoz"....kind of like a shortened version of "kel ker shoz" I assume. And, my guess is there are probably areas in France where people have their own little jargon and may even use the same words and pronunciations.
Boring is "ennuyeux" in French. The feminine is "ennuyeuse".
Feminine. The masculine version is 'paresseux'.
You can say "Il n'est pas paresseux" in French.
un chat indolent/paresseux
In French lazy is translated "paresseux" (masc.) or "paresseuse" (fem.)
paresseux
"Laz-ee" in English is pronounced as "Len" in French.
prendre vos livres à exersise traduire vous-même vous crapaud paresseux
the cat is lazy
des garçons paresseux
paresseux, paresseuse means "lazy" in French.
lazyparesseux is the masculine adjective meaning lazy in French.
sweat and its feminine