Examples of using "Franzose" in a sentence and their english translations:
Are you French?
- I am French.
- I'm French.
He's a Frenchman.
The Frenchman sings.
Tom is French.
Are you French?
Are you American or French?
Tom's not French.
Are you American or French?
Are you American or French?
Are you French or English?
He is not an American but a Frenchman.
- The Frenchman sings.
- The rooster crows.
A friend of my sister is French.
- I am French.
- I'm French.
- I am French.
- I'm French.
He is French.
Tom is French.
He was a Frenchman. I could tell by his accent.
I could tell from his accent that he was a Frenchman.
A person who is born in France is French.
- He was a Frenchman, as I discovered from his accent.
- He was a Frenchman. I could tell by his accent.
I could tell from his accent that he was a Frenchman.
I have a Russian passport, but I'm French.
That man is French. Are you and your sister, too?
That man is French. Are you and your sister, too?
"How did you come to speak French so well?" - "Well, I am French."
Did you know I'm French?
"How did you come to speak French so well?" - "Well, I am French."
He is French by birth, but he is now a citizen of the USA.
A Frenchman, for instance, might find it hard to laugh at a Russian joke.
I wish you success on your oral exam! Is the examiner French?
Did you know that, in French, one doesn't hear the difference between "the symmetry" and "the asymmetry"?
Paradise is where the chef is French, the auto mechanic is German, the banker is Swiss, the lover is Italian and the police are English.
Researchers at the university of Paderborn have established that it took up to 2000 hours of English learning for a French speaker to speak English correctly. Given that there are 32 weeks of classes in a year and with 3 hours of lessons every week, 20.83 years of study are thus necessary for a French person to speak good English.