de means of. d' is used when de comes in front of a word that starts with a vowel.
it's used a lot when talking about food. In french when u say I ate an apple or we ate apples, they use 'some' (de) not 'the' (le) to reference that not all the apples in the world are being eaten, just one or some
"Elles Ont" Means " They Have " In French , ! :D :D
cassé is broken in french :D
in French what does E O mean
Sinssa doesn't mean anything in French.
That is not a "real" name and it does not mean anything in French.
"J'ai treize Ans" Means "I have thirteen years " , !!! :D :D :D btw, that is how the french say how old they r 'i have ... years.' weird
"Elles Ont" Means " They Have " In French , ! :D :D
In French names, "de" means "from". This is fairly frequent, as are beginnings with "d" or "du" for the same reason.
In French d' is short for de, which means of. Before a vowel de is shortened to d'.
The exact same thing Carol! glad to help :D
"Oh my!, "Oh dear!" It also may mean darn or d**n.
D is pronounced de in french.
"D' ou" is a French contraction that combines the preposition "de" (of, from) with the pronoun "où" (where). Together, they create the meaning "from where" or "of where" in English.
Une adresse (fem., single 'd') is 'an address' in English.
Rebelle fleur supposedly means rebel flower in french or something :D
Normandy was the French region attacked on D-Day
The French economy is like a French economy. >:D