Précieuse in the feminine and précieux in the masculine are French equivalents of the English phrase "precious one."
Specifically, the word functions as an adjective, noun or pronoun in its feminine or masculine singular form. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine singular indefinite article une("a, an") or the masculine le and un. The respective pronunciations will be "prey-syuhz" in the feminine and "prey-syuh" in the masculine.
pierres précieuses
it would be ''Notre amour est aussi précieux que de l'or'' its the direct translation ... but it makes sense ;)
Precious in Japanese is "ki-chou", "dai-ji", etc.
beautiful; however, it's usually used as precious.
The name Jade means Precious Green Stone, or Most Beautiful Gemstone. It has American, Spanish, African, Australian, Chinese, Danish, English, and French origins. Whew!
Semi-precious stones are "des pierres semi-précieuses" in French.
précieux
pierres précieuses
Because it was the french who wanted to cripple his precious Germany
mon précieux, ma précieuse
Ma précieuse
précieux/précieuse et beau/belle
No, the French primarily came to Canada for the fur trade. Mining for precious metals did not begin in earnest until the 1850s to the 1880s, well after France had ceded its North American territories.
Cherise means "precious one" and a variant Cerise means cherry in french
un précieux trésor
precious lock precious key precious baby
The answer to the question is: Cheri is French for chéri{A} beloved, darling, precious{N} sweet, sugar, honey, poppet