Miracle is a French equivalent of the English word 'miracle'. It's a masculine noun whose definite article is 'le' [the'], and whose indefinite article is 'un'['a, one']. It's pronounced 'mee-rah-kluh'.
un miracle
If you could spell it, you would in fact have a French word - un miracle.
Miracle
It means 'a miracle', because that's what I am.
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un miracle
un miracle
La vie est un beau miracle
Miracle. Pronunciation- mEEr-aK-Le
The second syllable
If you could spell it, you would in fact have a French word - un miracle.
miracle. As simple as that
Miracle is the same in English and in French. The masculine singular noun in question may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular le since French employs the definite article where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "mee-rak" in northerly French and "mee-ra-kluh" in southerly French.
Miracle is an equivalent of the English word 'miracle' in French. Ihme is an equivalent in Finnish. Wunder is an equivalent in German. Ness is an equivalent in Hebrew. Milagro is an equivalent in Spanish. Mirakel is an equivalent in Norwegian and in Swedish.
The origin of the word miracle is Middle English. It originates from Old French, from the Latin word miraculum 'object of wonder,' from mirari 'to wonder,' from mirus'wonderful.'
hoe do you say Little Miracle
Jean-Pierre Guay has written: 'Miracle(Le)' -- subject(s): Diaries, Authors, French-Canadian