A saw is une scie. The verb is scier.
There are a lot of tongue twisters in French that use this verb. I found these ones on About.com:
Si ces six scies-ci scient si bien ce cyprès-ci, ces six scies-ci scieront ces six cents cyprès-ci.
Si six cent scies scient six cent saucisses, six cent six scies scieront six cent six saucissons.
(I) saw - j'ai vu - a saw (for sawing wood) une scie
It is spelled songe. saw(n)zh is as close as I can do here.
the french and Spanish start fighting because they were two colonies who didn't like each other and fought all the time
cama sa va?This question depends on who you are talking to. If you are talking to someone familiar to you, you would say,"Es-tu ça va?"Which literally translates to, "Be you OK?", and sounds like, "A two saw vaw (rhymes with saw)."If you are talking to someone unfamiliar to you, or a group (plural), you would say,"Êtes-vous ça va?"Which literally translates to, "Be you OK?" as well, and sounds like, "A-tay saw vaw (rhymes with saw)."Hope this helps!
In English ''un oiseau'' is the french word for bird.
The French word for saw is "scie."
"Je l'ai vue" is the translation for "I saw her" in French.
The French for carpet is "tapis".
We-We
(I) saw - j'ai vu - a saw (for sawing wood) une scie
dog how
cent
Louis Pasteur was French.
if you mean say, bonjour means hello in french.
la lune
French
Quand je t'ai vu