an oriental boudior is a womans changing room
It depends on how the word is used. In architecture, the boudoir is a room adjacent to the bedchamber for dressing and bathing, typically, but could also be used as a private drawing room. In Photography, boudoir is a style in which the subjects, women in most cases, are wearing little clothing or lingerie. In furniture, boudoir is used to denote that a bedroom has been styled in a Renaissance- or French- theme.
No idea AT all but if you go dictionary.com type the word in the top search box and press enter and they will give a definition : )
La femme (au) boudoir in French means "the woman (who stays a lot in her) bedroom" in English.
Find out yourself you fat, Indiana punk
womans changing room
A pillow in an ornate bed.
generally eastern
It is pronounced "boo-dwar"
Probably "Bonjour chez toi" (say hi to your family) "chez toi" means "at your place" "boudoir" does not really mean anything in this context, nobody has a "boudoir" room in their apartments since over a century ago...
hartford is not a french word.
it is not a French word!
wage isn't a French word.
boudoir
boudoir
french
"Boudoir" is a French word that translates to "a woman's private sitting room or salon." In English, it is often used to describe a style of photography that is romantic, sensual, and intimate, usually featuring women in lingerie or other revealing clothing.
boudoir
"Boudoir" is French for "bedroom." The phrase as a whole probably means that someone was trying to show off but didn't remember the right word (my guess is they meant "Bordeaux", a wine-growing region in France and more pertinently the type of wine produced in that region).
From the French, the noun is boudoir, plural boudoirs (a woman's intimate sitting room or bedroom).(The spelling boudoise appears in the French Shoe poster series Mule de Boudoise.)
boo-door
It is pronounced "boo-dwar"
Boudoir is the house part name which comes from the French equivalent of the English word "sulk." The masculine singular word serves as a somewhat dated, old-fashioned, but oftentimes humorous, way of designating a bedroom. The pronunciation will be "boo-dwar" in French.
Bouder. It also means to pout. Interestingly, the french word boudoir, whic means a bedroom in english, comes from the french meaning a sulking room; somewhere that a woman could go when she wasn't talking to her husband.
Probably "Bonjour chez toi" (say hi to your family) "chez toi" means "at your place" "boudoir" does not really mean anything in this context, nobody has a "boudoir" room in their apartments since over a century ago...