It can be a small hut-like building usually in the middle of the pavement which serves as a small newsagent's shop, or it can be the equivalent of a bandstand in a park - un kiosque à musique.
The cast of La minute Kiosque - 2007 includes: Anne Catherine Savoy as Wendy Roland Vouilloz as Marcel
a news stand.
The Kiosque is an excellent source of information on upcoming cultural events in Aberdeen, Scotland. You can find listings of local Movie Theaters, Pubs, including the ones with live music, theatrical performances and music events.
The word "kiosk" is masculine in French, so it is "le kiosque".
Kiosk in English is the full word. In French Kiosque. In Turkish Toshk and in Persian Kushk. Generally meaning a Pavilion.
képi, klaxon, kermesse, kiosque, kyrielle , kangourou, kérosène, kilogramme, kilomètre, kaléidoscope, kiwi
It is a small, free-standing structure.Origin:1615-25; < French kiosque stand in a publicpark ≪ Turkish köşk villa < Persian kūshk palace, villa
The cast of Jet Set - 2000 includes: Karim Attia as Karim Didier Brengarth as Le vendeur Gucci Laurent Brochand as Rodolphe de Botron Mireille Casanova as Dame kiosque 1 Guillaume Gallienne as Evrard Cathy Guetta as Mercedes Catherine Hirsh as Cliente kiosque courrier Adel Kachermi as himself Foc Khan as Foc Khan Estelle Larrivaz as Lydia Samuel Le Bihan as Mike Bernard Loiseau as himself Ornella Muti as Camilla Balbeck Fabienne Roux as Femme kiosque comtesse Bruno Solo as Jimmy Jovanka Sopalovic as Natacha Lambert Wilson as Arthus de Poulignac Alexandre Zouari as Kashayar
My favourite French word that starts with k is kif. Kilogramme will confuse your teacher less. kaki, kaléidoscope, kangourou, kayac, kermesse, kérosène, kilo, kiosque, kiwi, korrigan
almost none. kepi a hat worn by a gendarme or some types of soldier kaki a fruit kilowatt, kilogramme, kilometre
képi, kermesse, kiosque, kangourou, kérosène, kilogramme, kilomètre, kaléidoscope, kiwi, fakir contain the letter K in French.
The most immediate source is the French kiosque (17c.), which (along with German and Polish kiosk) derives from the Turkish koshk or kiöshk, meaning "pavilion, summer house," which, in turn, derives from from Persian kushk "palace, villa; pavilion, portico." The current use of the term probably references the form and appearance of some of the pavilions and porticos.