Chien brun is a French equivalent of the English phrase "brown dog." The masculine singular phrase most famously refers to the canine character in the 2013-published collection of six novellas by Jim Harrison (Dec. 11, 1937-Mar. 26, 2016). The pronunciation will be "shya breh" in French.
Eau de chien mouillé in French means "wet dog water" in English.
Translation: Goodbye, female dog.Note: Just like the specific word in English that can mean a female dog or be a derogatory word for a woman, Chienne can be put to the same end.
Dog in Japanese is 'inu'.
Chien in french means dog. It is written "le chien" - "the dog", it refers to both feminin and masculin dogs, even though the noun is masculin. "le" before the noun is masculin "la" before the noun is feminin
pas de chien means 'no dog' in French.
dog
Le chien noir in French is "the black dog" in English.
Eau de chien mouillé in French means "wet dog water" in English.
A dog is translated 'un chien' in French.
"With dog" in English is con cane in Italian.
Female dog in French is "chienne".
"Dentist for (a) dog" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase dentiste pour chien. The pronunciation of the masculine singular prepositional phrase -- which also translates as "canine dentist" or "dog dentist" -- will be "daw-teest poor shya" in French.
Translation: Goodbye, female dog.Note: Just like the specific word in English that can mean a female dog or be a derogatory word for a woman, Chienne can be put to the same end.
"El perro" translates to "the dog" in English.
Dog in Japanese is 'inu'.
Direct translation would be : "Mord moi", although the expression "bite me" doesn't seem to have a french equivalent
inu