Glossary of French expressions in English


Many words in the English vocabulary are of French origin, most coming from the Anglo-Norman spoken by the upper classes in England for several hundred years after the Norman Conquest, before the language settled into what became Modern English. Thoroughly English words of French origin, such as art, competition, force, machine, money, police, publicity, role, routine and table, are pronounced according to English rules of phonology, rather than French, and are commonly used by English speakers without any consciousness of their French origin.
This article, on the other hand, covers French words and phrases that have entered the English lexicon without ever losing their character as Gallicisms: they remain unmistakably "French" to an English speaker. They are most common in written English, where they retain French diacritics and are usually printed in italics. In spoken English, at least some attempt is generally made to pronounce them as they would sound in French; an entirely English pronunciation is regarded as a solecism.
Some of them were never "good French", in the sense of being grammatical, idiomatic French usage. Some others were once normal French but have become very old-fashioned, or have acquired different meanings and connotations in the original language, to the extent that they would not be understood by a native French speaker.


[|A] [|B] [|C] [|D] [|E] [|F] [|G] [|H] [|I] [|J] K [|L] [|M] [|N] [|O] [|P] [|Q] [|R] [|S] [|T] [|U] [|V] W X Y [|Z]
[|Not used as such in French] — [|Found only in English] — [|French phrases in international air-sea rescue] — [|See also] — [|References]

Used in English and French

A

; : short for à la manière de; in the manner of/in the style of
; à la carte: lit. "on the card, i.e. menu"; In restaurants it refers to ordering individual dishes "à la carte" rather than a fixed-price meal "menu". In America "à la Carte Menu" can be found, an oxymoron and a pleonasm.
; : regarding/concerning
; : lit. "camp helper"; A military officer who serves as an adjutant to a higher-ranking officer, prince or other high political dignitary.
; : lit. "memory aid"; an object or memorandum to assist in remembrance, or a diplomatic paper proposing the major points of discussion
; : "Self-love", Self-respect.
; amuse-bouche or amuse-gueule: lit. "mouth-amuser"; a single, bite-sized hors d'œuvre. In France, the exact expression used is amuse-gueule, gueule being slang for mouth, although the expression in itself is not vulgar. The expression refers to a small mouthful of food, served at the discretion of the chef before a meal as an hors d'oeuvre or between main courses.
; ancien régime: a sociopolitical or other system that no longer exists, an allusion to pre-revolutionary France
; : preview; a first impression; initial insight.
; apéritif or aperitif: lit. " opening the appetite", a before-meal drink. In colloquial French, un apéritif is usually shortened to un apéro.
; appellation contrôlée: supervised use of a name. For the conventional use of the term, see Appellation d'origine contrôlée
; appetence: 1. A natural craving or desire 2. An attraction or affinity; From French word "Appétence", derived from "Appétit".
; après moi, le déluge: lit. "After me, the deluge", a remark attributed to Louis XV of France in reference to the impending end of a functioning French monarchy and predicting the French Revolution. It is derived from Madame de Pompadour's , "after us, the deluge". The Royal Air Force No. 617 Squadron, famously known as the "Dambusters", uses this as its motto.
; arête: a narrow ridge. In French, also fishbone; edge of a polyhedron or graph; bridge of the nose.
; : a type of cabinet; wardrobe.
; : ulterior motive; concealed thought, plan, or motive.
; art nouveau: a style of decoration and architecture of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It takes a capital in French.
; attaché: a person attached to an embassy; in French it is also the past participle of the verb attacher
; attaque au fer: an attack on the opponent's blade in fencing, e.g. beat, expulsion, pressure.
; : on the contrary.
; : up-to-date; abreast of current affairs.
; : being conversant in or with, or instructed in or with.
; au gratin: "with gratings", anything that is grated onto a food dish. In English, specifically 'with cheese'.
; : lit. "with juice", referring to a food course served with sauce. Often redundantly formulated, as in 'Open-faced steak sandwich, served with au jus.' No longer used in French, except for the colloquial, être au jus.
; au naturel: 1. a. Nude. b. In a natural state: an au naturel hairstyle. 2. Cooked simply.
; au pair: a young foreigner who does domestic chores in exchange for room and board. In France, those chores are mainly child care/education.
; !: "See you later!" In French, a contraction of Au plaisir de vous revoir.
; avant-garde : applied to cutting-edge or radically innovative movements in art, music and literature; figuratively "on the edge", literally, a military term, meaning "vanguard" or "advance guard", in other words, "first to attack".
; avant la lettre: used to describe something or someone seen as a forerunner of something before that something was recognized and named, e.g., "a post-modernist avant la lettre", "a feminist avant la lettre". The expression literally means "before the letter", i.e., "before it had a name". The French modern form of this expression is avant l'heure.
; avoirdupois: used in Middle English, avoir de pois = commodities sold by weight, alteration of Old French aveir de peis = "goods of weight"

B

; baguette: a long, narrow loaf of bread with a crisp crust, often called "French bread" or "French stick" in the United Kingdom. In French, a baguette is any long and narrow stick-like object, for example a "chopstick". Also, a rectangular diamond, cut to twenty-five facets.
; banquette: a long upholstered bench or a sofa.
; : Used interchangeably with the English equivalent of "lots of/many/a great number of". Appropriate when the speaker wants to convey a greater positive connotation and/or greater emphasis. Often used as an informal expression, mostly in small regional dialect-pockets in the Canadian Prairies and the American South, especially in Alberta and Louisiana respectively.
; : lit. "beautiful gesture", a gracious gesture, noble in form but often futile or meaningless in substance. This French expression has been pressing at the door of standard English with only partial success, since the appearance of P. C. Wren's Beau Geste, the first of his Foreign Legion novels.
; Beaux-Arts: monumental architectural style of the early 20th century made famous by the Académie des Beaux-Arts.
; : lit. "fine mind"; a cultivated, highly intelligent person.
; Belle Époque: a period in European social history that began during the late 19th century and lasted until World War I.
; belles-lettres: lit. "fine letters"; literature regarded for its aesthetic value rather than its didactic or informative content; also, light, stylish writings, usually on literary or intellectual subjects
; : well understood, well known, obvious – "of course"
; : lit. "well thinking"; right thinking, orthodox. Formerly implied willful blindness to dangers or suffering faced by others but, nowadays corresponds to "politically correct". The noun form bien-pensance is rarely seen in English.
; billet-doux: lit. "sweet note", love letter
; : unimpressed with something because of overfamiliarity, jaded.
; : lit. "good appetite"; "enjoy your meal".
; : well-chosen word, particularly a witty remark
; : one who enjoys the good life, an epicurean.
; : lit. "good journey"; have a good trip!
; bourgeois: member of the bourgeoisie, originally councilmen, burghers or even aristocrats living in towns in the Middle Ages. Now the term is derogatory, and it applies to a person whose beliefs, attitudes, and practices are conventionally middle-class.
; bric-à-brac: small ornamental objects, less valuable than antiques; a collection of old furniture, china, plates and curiosities. Cf. de bric et de broc, corresponding to English "by hook or by crook", and brack, refuse.
; bricolage: to improvise or assemble something useful from what happens to be at hand; to expedite or economize a project with readily available components, versus a kit or outside sources; to reuse spare parts for other than their original purpose; to create something new by arranging old material; to create a new, valuable purpose for an object that has completed its original purpose and otherwise be discarded. Connotes an intrepid do-it-yourself spirit or clever repurposing. Differs from tinkering which merely modifies an existing arrangement. The term is used metaphorically to describe inventive philosophy, theories, and practices in business and academic fields, where new concepts are found in interactions of old ideas.
; brioche: a sweet yeast bun, kind of a crossover between a popover and a light muffin; French also use the term as slang for 'potbelly', because of the overhang effect.
; : government office; an agency for information exchange. Also means "desk" in French, and in the U.K.

C

; ça ne fait rien: "that doesn't matter"; rendered as san fairy Ann in British World War I slang.
; cache: a collection of items of the same type stored in a hidden or inaccessible place. Often used for weapons.
; cachet: lit. "stamp"; a distinctive quality; quality, prestige.
; café: a coffee shop.
; café au lait: coffee with milk; or a light-brown color. In medicine, it is also used to describe a birthmark that is of a light-brown color.
; calque: a copied term/thing.
; :
  1. an unfounded rumor or anecdote.
  2. a leading airfoil attached to an aircraft forward of the main wing.
  3. a slang word for "newspaper".
  4. a piece of sugar slightly soused with coffee or cognac.
; canapé: A small, prepared and usually decorative food, held in the fingers and often eaten in one bite. In French, it can also refer to a "sofa".
; : lit. "white card" ; unlimited authority.
; carte de visite: lit. "visiting card"; a calling card.
; cause célèbre controversial celebrity issue.
c'est la guerre: "That's war!", or...
c'est la vie: "That's life!" or "Such is life!"
; chaise longue: a long chair for reclining; sometimes misstated as "chaise lounge"
; Champs-Élysées: lit. "Elysian Fields"; Avenue des Champs-Élysées, one of the broadest boulevards in Paris. Often referred to as simply les Champs.
; chanteuse: ' singer', a female singer, especially at a nightclub, bar, cabaret, or diner.
; chargé d'affaires: a diplomat left in charge of day-to-day business at a diplomatic mission. Within the United States Department of State, a "chargé" is any officer left in charge of the mission in the absence of the titular chief of mission.
; chauffeur: driver.
; chef d'œuvre: a masterpiece.
; cherchez la femme: "look for / seek the woman", in the sense that, when a man behaves out of character or in an otherwise apparently inexplicable manner, the reason may be found in his trying to cover up an illicit affair with a woman, or to impress or gain favour with a woman. This expression was first used in a novel by Alexandre Dumas, in the third chapter of Les Mohicans de Paris, in the form of cherchons la femme. The expression is found in John Latey's 1878 English translation: "Ah! Monsieur Jackal, you were right when you said, 'Seek the woman.'" The phrase was adopted into everyday English use and crossed the Atlantic by 1909.
; : at the house of: often used in the names of restaurants and the like; Chez Marie = "Marie's".
; chic: stylish.
; chignon: a hairstyle worn in a roll at the nape of the neck.
; cinéma pur: an avant-garde film movement which was born in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s.
; cinéma vérité: realism in documentary filmmaking. "Vérité" means "truth".
; cliché: originally referred to a printer's block used to reproduce type, compare the original meaning of stereotype. A phrase that has become trite through overuse; a stereotype.
; clique:a small exclusive group of friends; always used in a pejorative way in French and, usually, in English. Often pronounced the same as "click" in British English.
; cloisonné: an ancient technique for decorating metalwork objects.
; commandant: commanding officer of a base, depot or training area. In France, used for an airline pilot , in the Army as appellative for a chef de bataillon or a chef d'escadron or in the Navy for any officer from capitaine de corvette to capitaine de vaisseau or for any officer heading a ship.
; comme ci, comme ça: lit. "like this, like that"; neither good nor bad, so-so.
; communiqué: lit. "communicated"; an official communication.
; concierge: a receptionist at a hotel or residence.
; concordat: an agreement; a treaty; when used with a capital C in French, it refers to the treaty between the French State and Judaeo-Christian religions during the French Empire : priests, ministers and rabbis became civil servants. This treaty was abolished in 1905 but is still in use in Alsace-Lorraine.
; confrère : a colleague, an associate
; contre-coup: against the blow. This word describes the repercussion of a physical or mental shock, or an indirect consequence of an event.
; contre-jour: against daylight. This word describes the light that illumines an object from the other side of your own point of view.
; : an awkward clash; a delay.
; coquette: a flirtatious girl; a tease.
; cordon bleu:. A "cordon bleu" may refer to several things, both in French and in English :
  1. A person who excels in cooking.
  2. An award given to such a person.
  3. An international group of hospitality management and cooking schools teaching French cuisine, founded in France.
  4. An escalope of veal, chicken or pork stuffed with ham and cheese, then breaded and fried.
; cordon sanitaire: a policy of containment directed against a hostile entity or ideology; a chain of buffer states; lit. "quarantine line".
; corniche: a road that clings like a ledge to the side of a cliff or mountain.
; cortège: a funeral procession; in French has a broader meaning and refers to all kinds of processions.
; : lit. "thunderbolt" ; a sudden unforeseen event, usually used to describe.
; coup d'état: political coup, government overthrow
; coup de grâce: the final blow that results in victory, historically used in the context of the battlefield to refer to the killing of badly wounded enemy soldiers, now more often used in a figurative context.
; coup de main:, means "help from someone". Example : "Besoin d'un coup de main ?" means "Need help ?"
; coup de maître: stroke of the master, master stroke. This word describes a planned action skilfully done. See also below
; coup de théâtre: a dramatic turn of events.
; coup d'œil: lit. "a blow of the eye"; a glance.
; couture: fashion.
; couturier: a fashion designer, a place where children are left by their parents for short periods in the supervision of childminders; both meanings still exist in French.
; crème brûlée: lit. "burnt cream"; a dessert consisting primarily of custard and toasted sugar, that is, caramel.
; : best of the best, "cream of the cream", used to describe highly skilled people or objects. A synonymous expression in French is fin du fin.
; crème fraîche: lit. "fresh cream", a heavy cream slightly soured with bacterial culture, but not as sour or as thick as sour cream and does not curdle.
; crêpe: a thin sweet or savoury pancake eaten as a light meal or dessert.
; crêperie: a takeaway restaurant or stall, serving crêpes as a form of fast food or street food, or may be a more formal sit-down restaurant or café.
; critique: a critical analysis or evaluation of a work, or the art of criticizing. From Latin criticus, from Ancient Greek κριτικός.
; croissant: a crescent-shaped bread made of flaky pastry; in French also the word for crescent.
; cul-de-sac: originally "bottom of sack" and used in English in anatomy since 1738. Used for dead end since 1800 in English, since 14th century in French. The often heard erroneous folk etymology "arse of the sack" is based on the current meaning of cul in French, but cul-de-sac is used to refer to dead ends in modern French and is not vulgar, though the terms :fr:impasse|impasse and voie sans issue are more common in modern French.

D

; de rigueur: required or expected, especially in fashion or etiquette.
; de trop: unnecessary, unwanted, or more than is suitable.
; : of inferior social status.
; décolleté: a woman's garment with a low-cut neckline that exposes cleavage, or a situation in which a woman's chest or cleavage is exposed; décolletage is dealt with below.
; décor: the layout and furnishing of a room.
; découpage: decoration with cut paper.
; demi-glace: a reduced wine-based sauce for meats and poultry.
; : semi-dry, usually said of wine.
; déjà vu: lit. "already seen": an impression or illusion of having seen or experienced something before.
; dénouement: lit. "untying": the resolution of a narrative.
; dépanneur: a convenience store.
; dérailleur: a bicycle gear-shift mechanism.
; dernier cri: lit. "latest scream": the latest fashion.
; derrière: lit. "behind": rear, buttocks.
; : partially clad or scantily dressed; also a special type of garment.
; détente: easing of diplomatic tension.
; digestif: a digestive aid, esp., an after-dinner drink, as brandy.
; directeur sportif: lit. "sports director". A person responsible for the operation of a cycling team during a road bicycle race. In French, it means any kind of sports director.
; divertissement: an amusing diversion; entertainment.
; dossier: a file containing detailed information about a person. In modern French it can be any type of file, including a computer directory. In slang, J'ai des dossiers sur toi means having materials for blackmail.
; : the senior member of a group; the feminine is. Also dean.
; dressage: a form of competitive horse training, in French has the broader meaning of taming any kind of animal.
; droit du seigneur: lit. "right of the lord": the purported right of a lord in feudal times to take the virginity of one of his vassals' brides on her wedding night. The French term for this hypothetical custom is droit de cuissage.
; du jour: lit. "of the day": said of something fashionable or hip for a day and quickly forgotten; today's choice on the menu, as soup du jour.

E

; eau de Cologne: a type of perfume, originating in Cologne. Its Italian creator used a French name to commercialize it, Cologne at that time being under the control of France.
; eau de toilette: lit. "grooming water". It usually refers to an aromatic product that is less expensive than a perfume because it has less of the aromatic compounds and is more for an everyday use. Cannot be shortened to eau, which means something else altogether in French.
; eau de vie: lit. "water of life", a type of fruit brandy.
; écarté: a card game; also a ballet position.
; : dance movement foot position.
; éclair: a cream and chocolate icing pastry.
; : great brilliance, as of performance or achievement. Conspicuous success. Great acclamation or applause.
; : flayed; biological graphic or model with skin removed.
; : a distinctive flair or style.
; élan vital: lit. "vital ardor"; the vital force hypothesized by Henri Bergson as a source of efficient causation and evolution in nature; also called "life-force"
; éminence grise: lit. "grey eminence": a publicity-shy person with little formal power but great influence over those in authority.
; en banc: court hearing of the entire group of judges instead of a subset panel.
; : as a group.
; : " on guard". "On guard" is of course perfectly good English: the French spelling is used for the fencing term.
; en passant: in passing; term used in chess and in neurobiology
; : lit. "in the open air"; particularly used to describe the act of painting outdoors.
; en pointe: on tiptoe. Though used in French in this same context, it is not an expression as such. A pointe is the ballet figure where one stands on tiptoes. The expression "en pointe", though, means "in an acute angle", and, figuratively, it qualifies the most progressive or modern things.
; :on the way. Often written and pronounced "On route" in British English.
; enfant terrible: lit. "terrible child"; a disruptively unconventional person.
; : A gripping listlessness or melancholia caused by boredom; depression
; entente: diplomatic agreement or cooperation. L'Entente cordiale refers to the good diplomatic relationship between France and United Kingdom before the first World War.
; : lit. "between us"; confidentially.
; entrée: lit. "entrance"; the first course of a meal ; used to denote the main dish or course of a meal.
; entremets: desserts/sweet dishes. More literally, a side dish that can be served between the courses of a meal.
; entrepreneur: a person who undertakes and operates a new enterprise or venture and assumes some accountability for the inherent risks.
; embonpoint: a plump, hourglass figure.
; épater la bourgeoisie or épater le bourgeois: lit. "to shock the middle classes", a rallying cry for the French Decadent poets of the late 19th century including Charles Baudelaire and Arthur Rimbaud.
; escargot: snail; in English, used only as a culinary term.
; esprit de corps: lit. "spirit of the body ": a feeling of solidarity among members of a group; morale. Often used in connection with a military force.
; esprit de l'escalier: lit. "wit of the stairs"; a concise, clever statement you think of too late, that is, on the stairs leaving the scene. The expression was created by French philosopher Denis Diderot. Very rarely used in French.
; l'État, c'est moi !: lit. "I am the state!" — attributed to the archetypal absolute monarch, Louis XIV of France.
; étude: a musical composition designed to provide practice in a particular technical skill in the performance of an instrument. French for "study."
; étui: small ornamental case for needles or cosmetics.
; : "Excuse me".
; extraordinaire: extraordinary, usually as a following adjective, as "musician extraordinaire."

F

; façade: the front view of an edifice ; a fake persona, as in "putting on a façade"
; : lit. "accomplished fact"; something that has already happened and is thus unlikely to be reversed; a done deal. In French used only in the expression placer/mettre quelqu'un devant le fait accompli meaning to present somebody with a fait accompli. Also see point of no return.
; : for want of better.
; faites comme chez vous
;
; faux pas:lit. "false step": violation of accepted, although unwritten, social rules.
;femme fatale:lit. "deadly woman": an attractive woman who seduces and takes advantage of men for her personal goals, after which she discards or abandons them. It extends to describe an attractive woman with whom a relationship is likely to result, or has already resulted, in pain and sorrow.
;feuilleton:lit. "little leaf of paper": a periodical, or part of a periodical, consisting chiefly of non-political news and gossip, literature and art criticism, a chronicle of the latest fashions, and epigrams, charades and other literary trifles.
; fiancé:betrothed; lit. a man/woman engaged to be married.
;film noir:Lit. "black film": a genre of dark-themed movies from the 1940s and 1950s that focus on stories of crime and immorality.
; fils:lit. "son": used after a man's surname to distinguish a son from a father, as Alexandre Dumas, fils.
; fin de siècle:The end of the century, a term which typically encompasses both the meaning of the similar English idiom turn of the century and also makes reference to the closing of one era and onset of another.
;flambé:a cooking procedure in which alcohol is added to a hot pan to create a burst of flames, meaning "flamed" in French. Also used colloquially in reference to something on fire or burned.
; flambeau:a lit torch.
;flâneur:a gentleman stroller of city streets; an aimless idler.
; fleur-de-lis: a stylized-flower heraldic device; the golden fleur-de-lis on an azure background were the arms of the French Kingdom.
; fleur de sel: lit. "flower of salt", hand-harvested sea salt collected by workers who scrape only the top layer of salt before it sinks to the bottom of large salt pans. Is one of the more expensive salts; traditional French fleur de sel is collected off the coast of Brittany most notably in the town of Guérande, but also in Noirmoutier, Île de Ré and Camargue.
; foie gras: fatty liver; usually the liver of overfed goose, hence: pâté de foie gras, pâté made from goose liver.
; folie à deux: a simultaneous occurrence of delusions in two closely related people, often said of an unsuitable romance. In clinical psychology, the term is used to describe people who share schizophrenic delusions. The derived forms folie à trois, folie à quatre, folie en famille or even folie à plusieurs do not exist in French where "collective hysterics" is used.
; force majeure: an overpowering and unforeseeable event, especially when talking about weather.
; : Lit. "strong point". Strength, expertise, one's strong point.
; : coldness.

G

; : blunder
; : covered parking
; : lit. "boy" or "male servant"; sometimes used by English speakers to summon the attention of a male waiter.
; : lit. "left". Clumsy, tactless.
; : boorishness, clumsiness.
; gendarme: a member of the gendarmerie; colloquially, a policeman
; gendarmerie: a military body charged with police duties
; : a type or class, such as "the thriller genre".
; : furnished vacation cottage typically in rural France.
; glissade: slide down a slope.
; Grand Prix:lit. "Great Prize"; a type of motor racing. English plural is Grands Prix.
; Grand Guignol: a horror show, named after a French theater famous for its frightening plays and bloody special effects.
; : a specialized soldier, first established for the throwing of grenades and later as elite troops.

H

; habitué: one who regularly frequents a place.
; haute couture: lit. "high sewing": Paris-based custom-fitted clothing; trend-setting fashion
; haute école: lit. "high school": advanced components of Classical dressage ; when capitalized, refers to France's most prestigious higher education institutions
; hauteur: lit. "height": arrogance.
; haut monde: lit. the "high world": fashionable society.
; Honi soit qui mal y pense: "Shamed be he who thinks ill of it"; or sometimes translated as "Evil be to him who evil thinks"; the motto of the English Order of the Garter.
; hors de combat: lit. "out of the fight": prevented from fighting or participating in some event, usually by injury.
; hors concours: lit. "out of competition": not to be judged with others because of the superiority of the work to the others.
; hors d'œuvre: lit. "outside the work": appetizer.

I

; : lit. "fixed idea": obsession; in music, a leitmotiv.
; impasse: a situation offering no escape, as a difficulty without solution, an argument where no agreement is possible, etc.; a deadlock.
; ingénu: an innocent young man/woman, used particularly in reference to a theatrical stock character who is entirely virginal and wholesome. L'Ingénu is a famous novella written by Voltaire.

J

; j'accuse: "I accuse"; used generally in reference to a political or social indictment.
; j'adoube: In chess, an expression, said discreetly, that signals the intention to straighten the pieces without committing to move or capturing the first one touched as per the game's rules; lit. "I adjust", from adouber, to dub.
; je ne regrette rien: "I regret nothing". Also the phrase the UK's then Chancellor of the Exchequer Norman Lamont chose to use to describe his feelings over the events of September 16, 1992.
; : lit. "I-don't-know-what": an indescribable or indefinable 'something' that distinguishes the object in question from others that are superficially similar.
; : lit. "play of spirit": a witty, often light-hearted, comment or composition
; : lit. "gilded youth"; name given to a body of young dandies, also called the Muscadins, who, after the fall of Robespierre, fought against the Jacobins. Today used for youthful offspring, particularly if bullying and vandalistic, of the affluent.
; : "joy of life/living".

L

; l'appel du vide: lit. "call of the void"; used to refer to intellectual suicidal thoughts, or the urge to engage in self-destructive behaviors during everyday life. Examples include thinking about swerving in to the opposite lane while driving, or feeling the urge to jump off a cliff edge while standing on it. These thoughts are not accompanied by emotional distress.
; laissez-faire:lit. "let do"; often used within the context of economic policy or political philosophy, meaning leaving alone, or non-interference. The phrase is the shortcut of Laissez faire, laissez passer, a doctrine first supported by the Physiocrats in the 18th century. The motto was invented by Vincent de Gournay, and it became popular among supporters of free-trade and economic liberalism. It is also used to describe a parental style in developmental psychology, where the parent does not apply rules or guiding. As per the parental style, it is now one of the major management styles. Used more generally in modern English to describe a particularly casual or "hands-off" attitude or approach to something,
; laissez-passer: a travel document, a passport
; laissez les bons temps rouler: Cajun expression for "let the good times roll": not used in proper French, and not generally understood by Francophones outside Louisiana, who would say profitez des bons moments.
; lamé: a type of fabric woven or knit with metallic yarns.
; lanterne rouge: the last-place finisher in a cycling stage race; most commonly used in connection with the Tour de France.
; : an offense against a sovereign power; or, an attack against someone's dignity or against a custom or institution held sacred.
; liaison: a close relationship or connection; an affair. The French meaning is broader; liaison also means "bond"' such as in une liaison chimique
; lingerie: a type of female underwear.
; littérateur: an intellectual.
; louche: of questionable taste, but also someone or something that arouses somebody's suspicions.
; Louis Quatorze: "Louis XIV", the Sun King, usually a reference to décor or furniture design.
; Louis Quinze: "Louis XV", associated with the rococo style of furniture, architecture and interior decoration.

M

; macramé: coarse lace work made with knotted cords.
; madame : a woman brothel-keeper. In French, a title of respect for an older or married woman ; sometimes spelled "madam" in English.
; mademoiselle: lit. "my noble young lady": young unmarried lady, miss.
; malaise:a general sense of depression or unease. Can also be used to denote complacency, or lethargy towards something.
; mange tout: a phrase describing snow peas and snap peas.
; manqué: unfulfilled; failed.
; Mardi gras: Fat Tuesday or Shrove Tuesday, the last day of eating meat before Lent.
; marque: a model or brand.
; matériel: supplies and equipment, particularly in a military context
; : lit. "bad quarter hour": a short unpleasant or uncomfortable moment.
; : Alt., MDR. Abbreviation in SMS, :wikt:mort de rire|akin to LOL; for mort de rire, or mourir de rire. Lit., as adjective or past tense, dead or d of laughing, so "died laughing" or "dying of laughter"; compare mort de faim for starve.
; mélange: a mixture.
; mêlée: a confused fight; a struggling crowd.
; ménage à trois: lit. "household for three": a sexual arrangement between three people.
; : a field of work or other activity; usually one in which one has special ability or training.
; milieu: social environment; setting.
; milieu intérieur: the extra-cellular fluid environment, and its physiological capacity to ensure protective stability for the tissues and organs of multicellular living organisms.
; mirepoix: a cooking mixture of two parts onions and one part each of celery and carrots.
; mise en place: an assembly of ingredients, usually set up in small bowls, used to facilitate cooking. This means all the raw ingredients are prepared and ready to go before cooking. Translated, "put in place."
; mise en scène: the process of setting a stage with regard to placement of actors, scenery, properties, etc.; the stage setting or scenery of a play; surroundings, environment.
; mise en table: table setting.
; montage: editing.
; le : lit. "the just word"; the right word at the right time. French uses it often in the expression chercher le mot juste.
; : a recurrent thematic element.
; : a pursing together of the lips to indicate dissatisfaction, a pout.
; mousse: a whipped dessert or a hairstyling foam; in French, however, it refers to any type of foam or moss.

N

; , née: lit. "born": a man's/woman's birth name, e.g., "Martha Washington, née Dandridge."
; : "isn't it ?"; asked rhetorically after a statement, as in "Right?".
; noblesse oblige: "nobility obliges"; those granted a higher station in life have a duty to extend favours/courtesies to those in lower stations. Used in French with the definite article.
; nom de guerre: pseudonym to disguise the identity of a leader of a militant group, literally "war name", used in France for "pseudonym".
; nom de plume: a "back-translation" from the English "pen name": author's pseudonym. Although now used in French as well, the term was coined in English by analogy with nom de guerre.
; :Unequalled, unrivalled; unparalleled; unique; more usual in modern French would be sans pareil.
; nouveau : new.
; nouveau riche: lit. "newly rich", used to refer particularly to those living a garish lifestyle with their newfound wealth; see also arriviste and parvenu.
; nouvelle vague: lit. "new wave." Used for stating a new way or a new trend of something. Originally marked a new style of French filmmaking in the late 1950s and early 1960s, reacting against films seen as too literary.

O

; objet d'art: a work of art, commonly a painting or sculpture; also a utilitarian object displayed for its aesthetic qualities
; : "work", in the sense of an artist's work; by extension, an artist's entire body of work.
; opéra bouffe: comedy, satire, parody or farce.
; : exceeding the lines of propriety; eccentric in behavior or appearance in an inappropriate way

P

; pain au chocolat: lit. "bread with chocolate." Despite the name, it is not made of bread but puff pastry with chocolate inside. The term chocolatine is used in some Francophone areas and sometimes in English.
; pain aux raisins: raisin bread.
; panache: verve; flamboyance.
; papier-mâché: lit. "chewed paper"; a craft medium using paper and paste.
; par avion: by aircraft. In English, specifically by air mail, from the phrase found on air mail envelopes.
; : better than all the others, quintessential.
; parc fermé: lit. "closed park". A secure area at a Grand Prix circuit where the cars may be stored overnight.
; parkour: urban street sport involving climbing and leaping, using buildings, walls, curbs to ricochet off much as if one were on a skateboard, often in follow-the-leader style. Originally a phonetic form of the French word parcours, which means "a run, a route" Also known as, or the predecessor to, "free running", developed by Sébastien Foucan.
; parole: 1) conditional early release from prison; see parole.
; parvenu: a social upstart.
; pas de deux: lit. "step for two"; in ballet, a dance or figure for two performers, a duet; also a close relationship between two people.
; pas de trois: lit. "step for three"; in ballet, a dance or figure for three performers.
; : a document or key that allows the holder to travel without hindrance from the authorities or enter any location.
; pastiche: a derivative work; an imitation.
; patois: a dialect; jargon.
; : lit. "father", used after a man's surname to distinguish a father from a son, as in Alexandre Dumas, père.
; peloton: in cycling, the main group of riders in a road race.
; petite bourgeoisie: often anglicised as "petty bourgeoisie", used to designate the middle class.
; la petite mort: lit. "the little death"; an expression for the weakening or loss of consciousness following an intense orgasm.
; Pied-Noir : lit. "black foot", a European Algerian in the pre-independence state.
; pied-à-terre : lit. "foot-on-the-ground"; a place to stay, generally small and applied to a secondary residence in a city.
; pince-nez: lit. "nose-pincher", a type of spectacles without temple arms.
; piste: lit. "trail" or "track"; often used referring to skiing at a ski area versus skiing in the back country.
; : beach, especially a fashionable seaside resort.
; plat du jour: lit. "dish of the day"; a dish served in a restaurant on a particular day but separate from the regular menu.
; : a male dishwasher in a professional kitchen.
; : the more things change, the more they stay the same.
; point d'appui:a location where troops assemble prior to a battle. While this figurative meaning also exists in French, the first and literal meaning of point d'appui is a fixed point from which a person or thing executes a movement.
;porte-cochère:an architectural term referring to a kind of porch or portico-like structure.
;poseur:lit. "poser": a person who pretends to be something he is not; an affected or insincere person; a wannabe.
;pot-au-feu:stew, soup.
; pour encourager les autres:lit. "to encourage others"; said of an excessive punishment meted out as an example, to deter others. The original is from Voltaire's Candide and referred to the execution of Admiral John Byng.
;:lit. "for drink"; gratuity, tip; donner un pourboire: to tip.
;prairie:lit. "meadow"; expansive natural meadows of long grass.
;prêt-à-porter:lit. "ready to wear"; clothing off the shelf, in contrast to haute couture.
;prie-dieu:lit. "pray God"; a type of prayer desk.
;prix fixe:lit. "fixed price"; a menu on which multi-course meals with only a few choices are charged at a fixed price.
;protégé :lit. "protected"; a man/woman who receives support from an influential mentor.
;provocateur:an agitator, a polemicist.
;purée:lit. a smooth, creamy substance made of liquidized or crushed fruit or vegetables.

Q

; Quai d'Orsay: address of the French foreign ministry in Paris, used to refer to the ministry itself.
; Quatorze juillet: "14th of July", usually called Bastille Day in English. The beginning of the French Revolution in 1789; used to refer to the Revolution itself and its ideals. It is the French National Day.
; quelle !: What a good idea!
; quel !: What a sad thing!.
; quelle !: What a horrible thing!.
; quelle surprise!: What a surprising thing!

R

; raconteur: a storyteller.
; : "reason for being": justification or purpose of existence.
; rapprochement: the establishment of cordial relations, often used in diplomacy.
; reconnaissance: scouting, the military exploration outside an area that friendly forces occupy
; Renaissance: a historical period or cultural movement of rebirth
; refoulement: the expulsion of persons who have the right to be recognised as refugees.
; reportage: reporting; journalism.
; répondez s'il-vous-plaît. : Please reply. Though francophones may use more usually "prière de répondre" or "je vous prie de bien vouloir répondre", it is common enough.
; : a restaurant owner.
; Rive Gauche: the left bank. A particular mindset attributed to inhabitants of that area, which includes the Sorbonne
; roi fainéant: lit. "do-nothing king": an expression first used about the kings of France from 670 to 752, who were puppets of their ministers. The term was later used about other royalty who had been made powerless, also in other countries, but lost its meaning when parliamentarism made all royals powerless.
; roman à clef: lit. "novel with a key": an account of actual persons, places or events in fictional guise.
; roué: an openly debauched, lecherous older man.
; roux: a cooked mixture of flour and melted butter used as a base in soups and gravies.

S

; sacre bleu: lit. "sacred blue": a dated French minced oath originating from the blasphemous "sacre dieu!". Meant as a cry of surprise or happiness.
; sang-froid: lit. "cold blood": coolness and composure under strain; stiff upper lip. Also pejorative in the phrase meurtre de sang-froid.
; : without.
; sans-culottes: lit. "without knee-breeches", a name the insurgent crowd in the streets of Paris gave to itself during the French Revolution, because they usually wore pantaloons instead of the chic knee-length culotte of the nobles. In modern use: holding strong republican views.
; sauté : lit. "jumped", from the past participle of the verb sauter, which can be used as an adjective or a noun; quickly fried in a small amount of oil, stir-fried. ex: sauté of veau.
; savant: lit. "knowing": a wise or learned person; in English, one exceptionally gifted in a narrow skill.
; savoir-faire: lit. "know how to do"; to respond appropriately to any situation.
; : fact of following conventional norms within a society; etiquette.
; sobriquet: an assumed name, a nickname.
; : lit. "oneself saying"; so-called; self-described.
; : fashionable; polished.
; : an evening party.
; sommelier: a wine steward.
; : a very small amount.
; soupe du jour: lit. "soup of the day", the particular kind of soup offered that day.
; succès d'estime: lit. "success of esteem; critical success"; sometimes used pejoratively in English.

T

; tableau: chalkboard. The meaning is broader in French: all types of board. Refers also to a painting or a table.
; tableau vivant: lit. "living picture"; the term describes a striking group of suitably costumed actors or artist's models, carefully posed and often theatrically lit.
; tenné: orange-brown, "rust" colour, not commonly used outside heraldic emblazoning.
; : lit. "head to head"; an intimate get-together or private conversation between two people.
; toilette: the process of dressing or grooming. Also refers in French, when plural, to the toilet room.
; torsades de pointes: lit. "twisting around a point", used to describe a particular type of heart rhythm.
; touché: lit. "touched" or "hit!": acknowledgment of an effective counterpoint or verbal riposte; comes from terminology in the sport of fencing. Not understandable in modern French, as "touché" means "emotionally touched".
; : lit. "feat of strength": a masterly or brilliant stroke, creation, effect, or accomplishment.
; tout court: lit. "all short": typically used in philosophy to mean "nothing else", in contrast to a more detailed or extravagant alternative. For instance, "Kant does not believe that morality derives from practical reason as applied to moral ends, but from practical reason tout court".
; tout de suite: right now, immediately. Often mangled as "toot sweet".
; tranche: lit. "slice": one of several different classes of securities involved a single financial transaction.
;triage:during a medical emergency or disaster, the process of determining the priority of medical treatment or transportation based on the severity of the patient's condition. In recent years, in British English usage, the term has also been used in the sense of to screen or address something at the point of contact, before it requires escalation.
; tricoteuse: a woman who knits and gossips; from the women who knitted and sewed while watching executions of prisoners of the French Revolution.
; trompe-l'œil: lit. "trick the eye"; photographic realism in fine-art painting or decorative painting in a home.
; trou de loup: lit. "wolf hole"; a kind of booby trap.

V

; : lit. "goes and comes"; the continual coming and going of people to and from a place.
; :an invited man/woman for a show, or "one who has come"; the term is unused in modern French, though it can still be heard in a few expressions like bienvenu/e or le premier venu. Almost exclusively used in modern English as a noun meaning the location where a meeting or event is taking place.
; vin de pays: lit. "country wine"; wine of a lower designated quality than appellation contrôlée.
dressing
; vinaigrette: diminutive of vinaigre : salad dressing of oil and vinegar.
; : lit. "face to face ": in comparison with or in relation to; opposed to. From , an obsolete word for "face", replaced by visage in contemporary French. In French, this is also a real estate vocabulary word, meaning that your windows and your neighbours' are within sighting distance.
; vive !: "Long live...!"; lit. "Live"; as in "Vive la France !", Vive la République !, Vive la Résistance !, Vive le Canada !, or Vive le Québec libre !. Unlike viva or vivat, it cannot be used alone; it needs a complement.
;!: lit. " live the difference"; originally referring to the difference between the sexes; the phrase may be also used to celebrate the difference between any two groups of people.
; !: lit. "see there"; in French it can mean simply "there it is"; in English it is generally restricted to a triumphant revelation.
; volte-face: frenchified form of Italian volta faccia, lit. "turn face", an about-face, a maneuver in marching; figuratively, a complete reversal of opinion or position.
; voulez-vous coucher avec moi ?: "Do you want to sleep with me ?" or more appropriately, "Will you spend the night with me?" In French, coucher is vulgar in this sense. In English it appears in Tennessee Williams's play A Streetcar Named Desire, as well as in the lyrics of a popular song by Labelle, "Lady Marmalade."
; voyeur: lit. "someone who sees"; a Peeping Tom.

Z

; zut alors!: "Darn it!" or the British expression "Blimey!" This is a general exclamation. Just plain zut is also in use, often repeated for effect: zut, zut et zut ! There is an album by Frank Zappa, punningly titled Zoot Allures. The phrase is also used on the Saturday Night Live Weekend Update sketch by recurring character Jean K. Jean, played by Kenan Thompson as well as by John Goodman's Dan Conner in an episode of Roseanne when Roseanne dresses up in a sexy outfit and has a boudoir photo taken of her as a birthday gift for her husband.

Not used as such in French

Through the evolution of the language, many words and phrases are no longer used in modern French. Also there are expressions that, even though grammatically correct, do not have the same meaning in French as the English words derived from them. Some older word usages still appear in Quebec French.
; :fashionable; in the US it also describes a dessert with ice cream or, in some US regions, with cheese. In French, it mainly means "fashionable", "trendy", but is occasionally a culinary term usually meaning something cooked with carrots and onions. It can also mean "in the style or manner ", and in this acceptation is similar to the shorter expression "". The British English meaning and usage is the same as in French.
; accoutrement: personal military or fighting armaments worn about one's self; has come to mean the accompanying items available to pursue a mission, or just accessories in general. In French, means a funny or ridiculous clothing; often a weird disguise or a getup, though it can be said also for people with bad taste in clothing.
; appliqué: an inlaid or attached decorative feature. Lit. "applied", though this meaning does not exist as such in French. However "appliqué inversé" exists and has the same meaning than a reverse appliqué. Also an "applique murale" is a decorative light fixture attached on a wall.
; après-ski: lit. "after skiing", socializing after a ski session; in French, this word refers to boots used to walk in snow. Commonly used for the same thing as in English in Quebec.
; arrêt à bon temps: A counterattack that attempts to take advantage of an uncertain attack in fencing. Though grammatically correct, this expression is not used in French. The term arrêt exists in fencing, with the meaning of a "simple counteroffensive action"; the general meaning is "a stop". A related French expression: s'arrêter à temps.
; : a skilled performer, a person with artistic pretensions. In French: an artist. Can be used ironically for a person demonstrating little professional skill or passion in both languages.
; : nude; in French, literally, in a natural manner or way. It means "in an unaltered way" and can be used either for people or things. For people, it rather refers to a person who does not use make-up or artificial manners. For things, it means that they have not been altered. Often used in cooking, like thon au naturel: canned tuna without any spices or oil. Also in heraldry, meaning "in natural colours", especially flesh colour, which is not one of the "standard" colours of heraldry.
; auteur: A film director, specifically one who controls most aspects of a film, or other controller of an artistic situation. The English connotation derives from French film theory. It was popularized in the journal Cahiers du cinéma: auteur theory maintains that directors like Hitchcock exert a level of creative control equivalent to the author of a literary work. In French, the word means "author", but some expressions like cinéma d'auteur are also in use.
; : a scary or unpopular person, idea, or thing, or the archetypal scary monster in a story; literally "black beast." In French, être la bête noire de quelqu'un means that you're particularly hated by this person or this person has a strong aversion against you, regardless of whether you're scary or not. The dictionary of the Académie française admits its use only for people, though other dictionaries admit it for things or ideas too. It also means that one is repeatedly defeated by a person, who is thus considered their archenemy.
; boutique: a clothing store, usually selling designer/one off pieces rather than mass-produced clothes. Can also describe a quirky and/or upmarket hotel. In French, it can describe any shop, clothing or otherwise. The expression hôtel-boutique can be used to refer to upmarket hotels, but the word is recent and not as widespread as the equivalent expression boutique hotel.
; boutonnière: In English, a boutonnière is a flower placed in the buttonhole of a suit jacket. In French, a boutonnière is the buttonhole itself. Yet the French expression "Une fleur à la boutonnière" has an equivalent meaning.
; c'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas la guerre: "it is magnificent, but it is not war" — quotation from Marshal Pierre Bosquet commenting on the charge of the Light Brigade. Unknown quotation in French.
; : An issue arousing widespread controversy or heated public debate, lit. 'famous cause'. It is correct grammatically, but the expression is not used in French.
; chacun à son goût: the correct expressions in French are chacun ses goûts / à chacun ses goûts / à chacun son goût: "to each his/her own taste".
; chanson: a classical "art song", equiv. to the German Lied or the Italian aria; or, in Russian, a :ru:Шансон|cabaret-style sung narrative, usually rendered by a guttural male voice with guitar accompaniment. In French, it can be used to refer to any song, but it also refers to the same music genre as in English.
; château: a manor house or a country house of nobility or gentry, with or without fortifications, originally—and still most frequently—in French-speaking regions. The word château is also used for castles in French, so where clarification is needed, the term château fort is used to describe a castle.
; chef: in English, a person who cooks professionally for other people. In French the word means "head" or "chief"; a professional cook is a cuisinier, chef-cuisinier referring to a head cook. Also, sous-chef, the second-in-command, directly under the head chef. Traditionally, chef used to means the head, for example a "couvre-chef" is a headgear, but by extension it's often used in job titles, military ranks, for a person in charge or who leads a group of people: "chef d'État", "chef d'entreprise", "chef d'orchestre", "sergeant-chef", "chef de gare", "chef de famille", etc. More casually in a work context, a chef is a boss.
; cinq à sept: extraconjugal affair between five and seven pm. In French, though it can also mean this, it primarily means any relaxing time with friends between the end of work and the beginning of the marital obligations. In Quebec French, it is also used as a synonym for "Happy Hour" by bars and restaurants that serve discounted drinks after working hours.
; claque: a group of admirers; in French, la claque is a group of people paid to applaud or disturb a piece at the theatre, though the common meaning of "claque" is "a slap"; clique is used in this sense.
; connoisseur: an expert in wines, fine arts, or other matters of culture; a person of refined taste. It is spelled connaisseur in modern French.
; corsage: A bouquet of flowers worn on a woman's dress or worn around her wrist. In French, it refers to a woman's chest and, by extension, the part of a woman's garment that covers this area.
; coup de main : a surprise attack. In French, un coup de main means " a hand". Even if the English meaning exists as well, it is old-fashioned.
; coup d'état :a sudden change in government by force; literally "hit of state." French uses the capital É, because the use of a capital letter alters the meaning of the word. It also cannot be shortened as coup as is often the case in English- because this literally means a "hit" in French, but can be used figuratively to mean many more things.
; :first public performance of an entertainment personality or group. In French, it means "beginning." The English meaning of the word exists only when in the plural form: ses débuts . The English meaning and usage also extends to sports to denote a player who is making their first appearance for a team or at an event.
; décolletage: a low-cut neckline, cleavage. In French it means: 1. action of lowering a female garment's neckline; 2. Agric.: cutting leaves from some cultivated roots such as beets, carrots, etc.; 3. Tech. Operation consisting of making screws, bolts, etc. one after another out of a single bar of metal on a parallel lathe. A low-cut neckline, or its shape, would in French be called un décollet : un décolleté profond, a deep décolletage; une robe très décolletée, a dress with very low neckline.
; démarche: a decisive step. In French, it means a preparing step, a specific set of steps to get a specific result, or a distinctive way of walking.
; dépanneur: a neighbourhood general/convenience store, term used in eastern Canada. This term is commonly used in Canadian French; however, in France, it means a repairman. In France, a convenience store would be a supérette or épicerie .
; émigré: one who has emigrated for political reasons. French also use the word exilé or réfugié or even "exilé politique" or "réfugié politique".
; encore: A request to repeat a performance, as in Encore!, lit. 'again'; also used to describe additional songs played at the end of a gig. Francophones would say « Une autre ! » or «Bis !» to request « un rappel » or « un bis ».
; : in a mass or group, all together. In French, masse refers only to a physical mass, whether for people or objects. It cannot be used for something immaterial, like, for example, the voice: "they all together said 'get out'" would be translated as ils ont dit 'dehors' en chœur. Also, en masse refers to numerous people or objects. In colloquial Québécois French, it means "a bunch".
; en suite:as a set. Can refer, in particular, to hotel rooms with attached private bathroom, especially in Britain where hotels without private facilities are more common than in North America. In French, suite, when in the context of a hotel, already means several rooms following each other. J'ai loué une suite au Ritz would be translated as "I rented a suite at the Ritz." En suite is not grammatically incorrect in French, but it is not an expression in itself and it is not used. Also used in British English to denote a bathroom that is accessible directly from the master bedroom of a house, rather than by a separate entrance.
; entrée: lit. "entrance"; in French, the first dish that starts a meal, i.e. the entrance to the meal. It can refer to a set of bites or small snacks, or a small dish served before a main course. The main dish or "plat de résistance" comes after the entrée. In American English, the meaning has migrated to "main dish". In other varieties of English it maintains its French meaning.
; épée: a fencing weapon descended from the duelling sword. In French, apart from fencing the term is more generic: it means sword.
; escritoire: a writing table. It is spelt écritoire in modern French.
; exposé: a published exposure of a fraud or scandal ; in French refers to a talk or a report on any kind of subject.
; femme: a stereotypically effeminate gay man or lesbian. In French, femme means "woman."
; fin de siècle: comparable to turn-of-the-century but with a connotation of decadence, usually applied to the period from 1890 through 1910. In French, it means "end of the century", but it isn't a recognized expression as such. The French expression "ambiance fin de règne" also has a light connotation of boredom and decadence.
; : a strength, a strong point, typically of a person, from the French fort and/or Italian forte and/or Latin forte. French uses fort for both people and objects.
; hors d'oeuvre: term used for the snacks served with drinks before a meal. Literally "outside of the work". The French use apéritif to refer to the time before a meal and the drinks consumed during that time, yet "hors d'œuvre" is a synonym of "entrée" in French and means the first dish that starts a meal. At home in family circles it means more specifically seasoned salads taken as a starter. In Québécois French, apéritif refers to the drink only, and hors-d'œuvre refers to a set of bites, while an entrée is a small dish.
; la sauce est tout: "The sauce is everything!" or "The secret's in the sauce!" Tagline used in a 1950s American television commercial campaign for an American line of canned food products. Grammatically correct but not used in French, where one might say Tout est dans la sauce or C'est la sauce qui fait le poisson.
; :wiktionary:fr:fr:lavatoire|Lavatoire or Lavatory: A once commonly used British term for a toilet or water closet. Before the age of the internet, it was commonly believed, and widely taught in schools in Britain, that the word Toilet was a rather vulgar, impure, corruption of the French word ":fr:Toilettes|Toilettes" and that Lavatory was the correct expression to use because it was much closer in meaning to the French the word it was derived from, "Lavatoire", which was supposed to mean "to wash, or to clean, yourself". Actually, though the word Lavatoire does exist in French, it never meant a toilet or a bathroom. The Lavatoire was the holy stone upon which the bodies of ecclesiastics, priest and members of the clergy, were once washed after their deaths, in order to prepare them for the afterlife, for their journey to heaven.
; marquee:the sign above a theater that tells you what is playing. From marquise, which means not only a marchioness but also an awning. Theater buildings are generally old and nowadays there is never such a sign above them; there is only the advertisement for the play. In English, means a temporary structure which is erected to host an event outdoors, especially in the UK, where such events can often be affected by weather conditions.
; : "yearning for the mud"; attraction to what is unworthy, crude or degrading. Though grammatically correct, it is not used in French.
; objet trouvé: an ordinary object, such as a piece of driftwood, a shell, or a manufactured article, that is treated as an objet d'art because it is aesthetically pleasing. In French, les objets trouvés, short for le bureau des objets trouvés, means the lost-and-found, the lost property.
; : out of the ordinary, unusual. In French, it means outraged or exaggerated, extravagant, overdone ; in that second meaning, belongs to "literary" style.
; passé: out of fashion. The correct expression in French is passé de mode. Passé means past, passed, or faded.
; peignoir: a woman's dressing gown. It means bathrobe. In French, both peignoir and robe de chambre are used interchangeably for a dressing gown regardless of sex, though the latter is generally considered formal and the former is generally seen as colloquial. A bathrobe is un peignoir de bain.
; pièce d'occasion: "occasional piece"; item written or composed for a special occasion. In French, it means "second-hand hardware." Can be shortened as pièce d'occas or even occas.
; portemanteau :in English a portmanteau is a large piece of luggage for clothes that opens into two parts. From this literal sense, Lewis Carroll, in his novel Through the Looking Glass playfully coined a further figurative sense for portmanteau meaning a word that fuses two or more words or parts of words to give a combined meaning. In French, lit. a 'coat-carrier', originally a person who carried the royal coat or dress train, now a large suitcase; more often, a clothes hanger. The equivalent of the English/ Lewis-Carroll portemanteau is un mot-valise. "Brexit" and "emoticon" are modern examples of portmanteau words.
; potpourri: medley, mixture; French write it pot-pourri, literally 'rotten pot': primarily a pot in which different kinds of flowers or spices are put to dry for years for the scent.
; : a concise summary. In French, when talking about a school course, it means an abridged book about the matter. Literally, précis means precise, accurate.
; première: refers to the first performance of a play, a film, etc. "La première" can be used in same way in French, but it more generally means "the first".
; : a type of author intrusion in which a writer inserts a character to argue the author's viewpoint; alter ego, sometimes called 'author avatar'. In French, a raisonneur is a character in a play who stands for morality and reason, i.e., not necessarily the author's point of view. The first meaning of this word though is a man who overdoes reasonings, who tires by objecting with numerous arguments to every order.
; : lit. searched; obscure; pretentious. In French, means 'sophisticated' or 'delicate', or simply 'studied', without the negative connotations of the English.
; : lit. "present yourself" or "proceed to"; a meeting, appointment, or date in French. In English, it generally endorses a mysterious overtone and refers to a one-on-one meeting with someone for another purpose than a date. Always hyphenated in French: rendez-vous. Its only accepted abbreviation in French is RDV.
; reprise:repetition of previous music in a suite, programme, etc. and also applied to an actor who resumes a role that they have played previously. In French, it may mean an alternate version of a piece of music, or a cover version, or the rebroadcast of a show, piece or movie that was originally broadcast a while ago. To express the repetition of a previous musical theme, French would exclusively use the Italian term coda.
; résumé: in North American English, a document listing one's qualifications for employment. In French, it means summary; French speakers would use instead curriculum vitæ, or its abbreviation, C.V..
;
': sexually suggestive; in French, the meaning of risqué is "risky", with no sexual connotation. Francophones use instead osé or sometimes dévergondé. Osé, unlike dévergondé, cannot be used for people themselves, only for things or attitudes.
; rouge a rouge is red makeup, also called blusher. Rouge à lèvres is French for "lipstick", even if the lipstick is not red at all. The French equivalent to the English meaning is "fard à joues"; 2) in Canadian football, a rouge is awarded when the ball is kicked into the end zone by any legal means, other than a successful field goal, and the receiving team does not return or kick the ball out of its end zone.
; séance : a gathering, usually using a 'medium', attempting to communicate with the dead. In French, the word means 'sitting' and usually refers to any kind of meeting or session.
; table d'hôte : in English, when used it usually refers to type of meal: a full-course meal offered at a fixed price. However, in French, it refers to a type of lodging: the closest English equivalent would be "a bed & breakfast" or "B&B." The origin of the meaning is that at a table d'hôte, unlike at a full-service purpose-built hotel, all patrons eat together at the host's table, whatever the family have prepared for themselves. Indeed, in France today a lodging labeled "table d'hôte" might perhaps not even offer food; the appellation meaning what an English-speaker would think of as a "bed & breakfast -style" family-home lodging. In Quebec, table d'hôte generally has the same meaning as in English, the expression couette et café is generally used to talk about B&B style accommodations, where the English expression is not used.
; tableau vivant : in drama, a scene where actors remain motionless as if in a picture. Tableau means painting, tableau vivant, living painting. In French, it is an expression used in body painting.
; touché: acknowledgment of an effective counterpoint. In French, used for "emotionally touched".
; vignette: a brief description; a short scene. In French, it is a small picture or a thumbnail. By extension a vignette is the name of a compulsory road tax in the form of a small sticker affixed to a vehicle windscreen, which is now also used in several European countries.

Found only in English

; aide-de-camp: "camp assistant"; in the army, a military assistant to a senior military officer. In Canada, it may also refer to the honorary position a person holds as a personal assistant to a high civil servant. It exists in French too but is written aide de camp.
; apprise: "to inform"; used to substitute the verb to inform when the information is crucial. Its French meaning is the feminine past participle of to learn . In English, when followed by an object it is used with the preposition of. Example without object: Please, apprise me. Example with object: he apprised of it.
; cinquefoil: five-petal, five-leaf flower of the genus Potentilla, family Rosaceae; also a circular 5-lobed ornamental design. Spelled quintefeuille in French.
; : "cry from the heart": an impassioned outcry, as of entreaty or protest. In French, the exact expression is cri du cœur.
; demi-monde: a class of women of ill repute; a fringe group or subculture. Fell out of use in the French language in the 19th century. Frenchmen still use une demi-mondaine to qualify a woman that lives off the commerce of her charms but in a high-life style.
; double entendre: a figure of speech wherein a word or phrases can be taken to have two distinct coherent meanings, most often in a fashion that is suggestive and/or ironic. "Entendre" is an infinitive verb, not a noun; a correct rendering would be "à double entente", an adjectival phrase meaning "of a double understanding or double interpretation". The modern French phrase is "à double sens".
; : "in place ": a hybrid phrase, partially translated from the existing French phrase au lieu.
; léger de main : "light of hand": sleight of hand, usually in the context of deception or the art of stage magic tricks. Meaningless in French, and has no equivalent.
; maître d':translates literally as master o'. The French term for head waiter is maître d'hôtel ; French never uses "d stand-alone. Most often used in American English and its usage in the UK is rare.
; negligée:A robe or a dressing gown, usually of sheer or soft fabric for women, or a nightdress. As with lingerie, the usage of the word suggests the garment is alluring or fancy. French uses négligé or nuisette. In French, the word négligée qualifies a woman who neglects her appearance.
; succès de scandale: "Success through scandal"; Francophones might use succès par médisance.
; voir dire: a trial within a trial, or jury selection. Literally "to speak the truth." In modern American court procedure, the examination of prospective jurors for their qualification to serve, including inherent biases, views and predelictions; during this examination, each prospective juror must "speak the truth" so that counsel and the court may decide whether they should remain on the jury or be excused. In England and Wales, the expression is used to refer to a "trial within a trial", during which a judge hears evidence in the absence of the jury, typically to decide whether a certain piece of evidence should be allowed to be presented to the jury or not. For example, a judge might hold a "voir dire" to determine whether a confession has been extracted from a defendant by an unfair inducement in order to decide whether the jury should hear evidence of the confession or not.

French phrases in international air-sea rescue

International authorities have adopted a number of words and phrases from French for use by speakers of all languages in voice communications during air-sea rescues. Note that the "phonetic" versions of spelling are presented as shown and not the.
; SECURITAY: the following is a safety message or warning, the lowest level of danger.
; PAN PAN: the following is a message concerning a danger to a person or ship, the next level of danger.
; MAYDAY: the following is a message of extreme urgency, the highest level of danger.
; SEELONCE: keep this channel clear for air-sea rescue communications.
; SEELONCE FEE NEE: this channel is now available again.
; PRU DONCE: silence partially lifted, channel may be used again for urgent non-distress communication.
; MAY DEE CAL: medical assistance needed.
It is a serious breach in most countries, and in international zones, to use any of these phrases without justification.
See Mayday for a more detailed explanation.