Same as in regular French..."paresseux" masculine or "paresseuse" feminine. I grew up hearing my grandmother say it all the time. There's not much of a difference between regular French and "Cajun" French. It all came from France, a very small bit of it got changed through the years, but it is still almost all the same. The only people I know of who speak it are the really old folks who are still living. Probably just better off studying regular French, it's almost the exact same. I was asking my grandmother how to say everyday words and she told me everything I asked her exactly the same as in regular French with the exception that she called a cookie "ti gateau" and when pronouncing the word for "something" she pronounced it "cake shoz"....kind of like a shortened version of "kel ker shoz" I assume. And, my guess is there are probably areas in France where people have their own little jargon and may even use the same words and pronunciations.
un chat indolent/paresseux
Namakemono
What is the french word french of Jack ? the french word for Jack its Jacques .
No, bonchule isn't a word in french...but "bonchure" is a word in french
Go freaking find out lazy bum!
Kidtinvim - or other phonetically approaching possibilities - isn't a French word, and means nothing in French.
The French word paresseuse means lazy (also un paresseux - a slacker).
In French lazy is translated "paresseux" (masc.) or "paresseuse" (fem.)
The word lazy is an adjective.
The Tagalog word for lazy is "tamad."
lazy
PerezosoPerezoso/a
The word for "lazy" in Russian is "ленивый" (lenivyy).
paresseux, paresseuse means "lazy" in French.
Yes. "The lazy dog, the laziest student, I feel lazy".
I was very lazy yesterday.