fleurs de pommier
Information is spelled the same in French, as is the short form "info". Both information and info are feminine nouns in French.
That is one spelling of the female given name, Eloise (French form of Louise).Variants are Heloise, and Elouise, and Ellie.
The word sought may be one of these:m'sieur - (French) the contraction form of monsieur (sir, mister), abbreviated M.messieurs - (French) the plural form of monsieur, abbreviated Mm. or Mssrs.misuser - someone who wrongly or illegally uses property
'Bien' is the adverb. = Well 'Bon' is the adjective. = Good The above may be meaningless to some Americans, since the separate adverbial form has almost disappeared in American English.
hors-d'oeuvres is how you would say appetizer in french. Pronounced OR Derves
The possessive form for the noun blossom is blossom's.
mathématiques is the translation of Maths in French. This is a short form of mathematics in French.
The correct spelling of the musical form is symphony(French symphonie).
Information is spelled the same in French, as is the short form "info". Both information and info are feminine nouns in French.
The Japanese international side are known as the cherry blossom if that helps.
in the infinitive form the word follow in french is suivre, and in past tense it is suivi. I can't remember the exact conjugation of each form.
The male given name (from French) may be Jacques, or Jaques, or the Scottish form Jock.
The spelling is cliche (French accented form cliché), meaning trite, outmoded, or stereotyped.
The most frequent form seems to be 'bracelet charms'. A more correct form would be 'bracelet à charmes'.
Avoir is to have, conjugated in the il (masculine singular - he) form would be a. So he has would be 'il a'
full form of apple..?
I'd spell it Mariam, because that's a cool name. If you feel it's necessary to change the spelling: Maryam is the Arabic/Persian form. Miryam is Hebrew form. Mirjam is the German, Dutch and Scandinavian form. Myriam is the French form. Meryem is the Turkish form.