the old French name for a dandelion was 'dent-de-lion' (lion's tooth).
Old in French is vieux (masculine) or vieille (feminine).
Headstrong, in Old French, is "testu."
princesse de glace - french princesse Kunal Dhikle
Old Navy
There is no such word in old French in Le Grand Robert dictionary.Please provide more context.
The word dandelion is from the french
Dandelion means lion's tooth in French. The petals look like sharp teeth.
Dandelion is from the French for teeth of the lion [dents de lion] because of the tooth shaped leaves.
un pissenlit (masc.)
yes of course there iss.
'Pissenlit' is a French equivalent of 'dandelion' [Taraxacum spp].The masculine noun 'pissenlit' is the common French word for 'dandelion'. Its singular definite article is 'le' ['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'un' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'pee-saw-lee'.
The word dandelion was derived from Old French dentdelion, literally translated, "tooth of the lion," referring to the sharply indented leaves of the plant.
the English name "dandelion" comes from the French "dent de lion" (lion's tooth). The French name for the dandelion is "un pissenlit", which is formed from "pisse + en + lit", literally "peeing in bed" "
Un pissenlit (dandelion in English) is a masculine noun in French.
It is a translation of the Latin Dens Leonis, which passed into French as Dent de Lion and subsequently into English as Dandelion. All translate as Lion's Tooth from the plant's toothed leaves
'Dandelion' is an English equivalent of 'pissenlit' [Taraxacum spp].The masculine noun 'pissenlit' is the common French word for 'dandelion'. Its singular definite article is 'le'['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'un' ['a, one']. It's pronounced 'pee-saw-lee'.
dandelion of course