The French refer to it as URL, the same as in English.
There is no French term for spatchcock in French. It is not a usual way to cook or grill chicken in France (it would be dismembered or broached).
The French term for ugly is laid.
The term "icing" in hockey is "dégagement refusé" in French.
The French term is carnet de notes.
Assuming that you're referring to ice hockey, the French term for a goalie's blocker is a "bouclier" (shield), sometimes called a "plaque" (I assume this is a French Canadian term)
url
URL - Uniform Resource Locator
Yes, a "gendarme" is a police officer in France who is part of a military branch responsible for policing in rural areas and small towns. They have both civilian and military duties.
url
Sir Tim Berners-Lee is credited with the coinage of the term Uniform Resource Locator (URL), which appears in discussion as early as 1989-90. The URL was suggested as a standard by Lee himself in 1994.
"Le mal de mer" is the French term for seasickness.
Hacking into the eBay databases is when the situation of the URL of eBay containing the characterless cgi. The term cgi stands for common database interface.
URL means "Universal Resource Locater" It's a term that kind of describes a web address but it's more specific. Web address example: Wiki.answers.com URL example: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Does_URL_mean_something_for_the_internet
attachment sender ID URL domain name download
If you are referring to the long-form of the English term "URL" it is "localizador uniforme de recursos", however, most Spanish speakers use the English abbreviation "URL" since that has become the popular term across the world.
URL is not a java-specific term. It means "uniform resource locator"; informally, it is the same as an "Internet address" - for example, the address to access a Web page, or an FTP server.
English to French