Français and Française are French slang equivalents of the English word "frog." The word translates as grenouille when referencing the amphibian whose legs French language speakers eat and as "Frenchman" (case 1) or "Frenchwoman" (example 2) when referring to the French as frog-eaters. The respective pronunciations will be "fraw-seh" or "fraw-sez" for the slang term and "gruh-nwee" for the animal in French.
Français, grenouille and hausse are French equivalents of the English word "frog." They respectively refer to an unkind slang word for a French person (case 1) because of France's frog legs cuisine, the amphibian (example 2) and the part of a musician's bow (instance 3). The respective pronunciations will be "fraw-seh," "gruh-nwee" and "oss" in French.
The Australian term (not slang) for French fries is "chips".
A frog is called 'une grenouille' (fem.) in French.
Kaeru.
La grenouille is a French equivalent of the English phrase "the frog." The feminine singular noun also translates colloquially as the equivalent of "the kitty" or "the piggy bank." The pronunciation will be "la gruh-nwee" in French.
It is a type of tree snake, directly translated from the "Afrikaans" language. (Boom - tree; slang - snake)
Frog legs and snails !!
la grenouille is translated 'the frog' in English.
if you mean grenouille, it's french for frog
Rana is an Italian equivalent of the English word "frog." The feminine singular noun may be preceded by the feminine singular word la since Italian employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "RA-na" in Pisan Italian.
It means small frog.
A frog is indeed a grenouille. Purple is pourpre in french. Violet / violette really means violet in English. Both English and french speakers confuse these two colours. Purple is a mixture of blue and red. Violet is a pure spectral colour.