Do you mean delicious? If so, it is delectable (with an accent grave over the first e, and accent acute over the second), or delicieux.
Quien, with an accent mark over the "e".
You click "insert" then "symbol" then scroll through to find the e with an accent
the accent is on the first "e" = née When there is a double "e" in a French word, the accent is always on the first one and never on the second.
une entrée, des entréesthe accent is on the first "e"when there is a French word with a double "e", always put the accent on the first one.
It is an accent mark, it this case it's an E with an acute accent.
To put an accent over the letter e using MS Word, go to the Insert menu and select Symbol. You will see letters with diacritics, including e with various accent marks.
The accent mark over the letter "e" is called an acute accent. It is used in various languages to indicate stress or pronunciation changes.
Yes, over the e
Fiance with one e (and an accent) is the masculine. Fiancee is the feminine, with an accent over the first e. I can't figure out how to type accents on windows, though :-/
un accent (masc.) un accent aigu : é un accent grave : è un accent circonflexe : ê
It emphasizes the part of the word where the accent is. for example Ingles. Without the accent it would simply be "Ingles." But the accent originally goes over the e. So you say the E with emphasis. "InglEs".
It means "is".
PRIMER with an accent over the "e"
It's an accent grave which doesn't really affect the pronounciation like the other accent, aigue.
Christmas = Noel (with two dots over the e) Halloween = la nuit des sorcieres (with an accent grave over the first e in sorcieres) Easter = Paques (with an accent circonflexe over the a) Thanksgiving = d'action de graces (with an accent circonflexe over the a in graces)
The English word "arithmetic" carries no accent mark. The equivalent Spanish word 'aritmetica' has an accent over the 'e'.