Not exactly, but French comes from Latin.
It means "wisdom". The Greek word for wisdom is "sophia", and "Sophie" is the French form of the name.
The Latin word form means: to shape or form!
Me and mihi are the Latin equivalents of 'me'. The Latin word 'me' is the accusative form, as the direct object of the verb. It also is the ablative form, as the object of a preposition. The Latin word 'mihi' is the dative form, as the indirect object of the verb.
Names generally aren't translated, they stay the same.However, according to Wikipedia, Caitlin is a Gaelic form of the Old French name Cateline, which is a variant of Catherine. There is a Latin version of that name: it's Catharina.
The French word for "chocolate" is "chocolat".
Caroline is the French feminine form of Carolus, the Latin form of Charles.
Caroline is a French feminine form of the name Carolus, the Latin form of Charles.
Both the singular and plural form of this word is "processus", it does not differ.
"Civilised" (or "civilized") came into English from French, and the French form was based on a Latin word.
It means "wisdom". The Greek word for wisdom is "sophia", and "Sophie" is the French form of the name.
The English word is from a French word, which is from a Latin word.English, in 1297, abbese; from French abbesse; from Latin abbatissa, the feminine form of abbas(English: abbot).
french is derived from latin therefore it is a latin language.
French language developed from vulgar Latin (Latin as it was used by common people). At the end of the middle Ages, there were two main stands of French, one northern based on Latin but also influenced by old Germanic languages, one southern more closely related to Latin. The two forms were close enough to allow mutual undertanding and ultimately the two strands blended into modern French, with the help of school which taught an unique form and rooted out regionalisms.
The girl's name "Louise" is actually a French form and has been borrowed in the French form into English and German both. It is the feminine of French "Louis," but French "Louis" originally comes from German "Ludwig," which comes from Chludwig meaning "warrior of fame," and was the name of several early Frankish kings; in Latin Chludwig was Latinized as "Clovis," so that is another form of the same name (in Latin).
latin in french is '' I DON'T KNOW''
"Latin" is spelled the same way in both French and English.
René Descartes from Cartesius, the Latin form of Descartes.