This is not a very french thing. A frenchman could say j'adore les croissants, but probably wouldn't. The french idiom is : Moi, j'adore les croissants. Moi, j'adore St. Moritz ! Moi, j'adore le tour eiffel.
Détroit, it's a french word meaning "strait", Detroit (Michigan) was founded by a frenchman named Antoine de la mothe Cadillac
Je pense que vous etes assez cool/super. "Frais" means cocky or arrogant - literally "fresh."
Superbus, -a, -um: proud, arrogant
to say meatballs in french you say: boulettes
arrogant, arrogante
Little Frenchman is "le petit français" in French.
Yes, a French citizen is commonly referred to as a Frenchman.
if you is informal and singular: tu es très arrogant if you is formal or plural: vous êtes très arrogants
No. A frenchman is a European, but a European is not necessarily a frenchman.
six feet is 'six pieds' in French. If you want any Frenchman to see how much it is, say 'un mètre quatre-vingt-trois'
"C'est le français" is a French phrase that translates to "It is French" in English.
There are many stereotypes about the French. Many may say that French people do not bathe, that they are arrogant, rude, lazy, and lack respect for others. This is untrue of most French people.
Colloquially, "pas terrible". Although this literally means "not terrible" any frenchman will understand this as "not very good".
Because De Gaulle was a coward and a blustering, arrogant Anglophobe.
Lafayette.
A Frenchman.