The beautiful French lady was so distraught at the death of her son I believe she took her life.
The French title, Mademoiselle means my young lady and is the proper way to address a young lady in French.
I guess... but the correct form would be Mademoiselle, meaning an unmarried lady, like Ms. and Madame would be a married lady, like Mrs. Their abbreviations are Mlle. and Mme.
Dame
a young lady is called 'une demoiselle' in French. You address this unmarried woman as 'mademoiselle'
une dame
She says (in French) "My son wants a green balloon."
french lady, easy
My lady is 'ma dame' in French.
A lady is 'une dame' in French.
Lady - dame
There isn't one. Ma'am is short for madame: old French for "my lady."
"Ma'am," "madam," "Mrs." and "my lady" are English equivalents of the French word madame. Whatever the context or meaning, the pronunciation of the feminine singular noun will be "ma-dam" in French.
The French word for lady is dame, the plural of which is dames.
It is this lady's purse.
The French title, Mademoiselle means my young lady and is the proper way to address a young lady in French.
In French, ladies are called as Mesdemoiselles (plural) Mademoiselle (singular)
Lady in French is 'dame'. Son in French is 'fils'. To say 'the lady and her son' you should say 'la dame et son fils'.