Old French meaning in Urdu
Old French Definitions
1) Old French : قدیم فرانسیسی : (noun) the earliest form of the French language; 9th to 15th century.
Useful Words
Balzac : فرانسیسی ناول نگار , Comte De Mirabeau : فرانسیسی انقلابی , Comte De Rochambeau : فرانسیسی جرنیل , Madame Tussaud : فرانسیسی نمونہ تیار کرنے والا , Maltese : مالٹا کی زبان , Abbe : فرانس کا پادری یا راہب , Frog : فرانسیسی نسل کا شخص , Ibert : فرانسیسی موسیقار , Jean Antoine Watteau : فرانسیسی مصور , Acadian : کینیڈا میں رہنے والے فرانسیسی آبادکار , Alfred De Musset : فرانسیسی شاعر , Maquis : پودوں کے نیچے اگنے والی جھاڑی , Degas : فرانسیسی مصور , Gavotte : قدیم فرانسیسی رقص , Pot-Au-Feu : بکرے کے گوشت کے دم پخت , Haute Cuisine : کھانا پکانے کا طریقہ , Jean-Paul Sartre : فرانس کا مصنف , Jacques Offenbach : فرانس کا موسیقی بنانے والا , Maurice Ravel : فرانسیسی موسیقار اور تحریک پیش کرنے والا شخص , Oriflamme : سرخ پرچم , Exocet : بحری جہاز شکن فرانسیسی راہبر میزائل , Acadia : کینیڈا کا قصبہ , Mayday : خطرے کا پیغام , Abelard : فرانسیسی فلسفی , Comte De Saxe : فرانسیسی جنگجو , Babar : تصوری ہاتھی , Secession : آسٹریا کا اسکول , Pierrot : فرانسیسی بہروپی یا مسخرہ , Daumier : فرانسیسی پینٹر , Bernard Hinault : فرانسیسی سائیکلسٹ , Cambodia : کمبوڈیا
Useful Words Definitions
Balzac: French novelist; he portrays the complexity of 19th century French society (1799-1850).
Comte De Mirabeau: French revolutionary who was prominent in the early days of the French Revolution (1749-1791).
Comte De Rochambeau: French general who commanded French troops in the American Revolution, notably at Yorktown (1725-1807).
Madame Tussaud: French modeler (resident in England after 1802) who made wax death masks of prominent victims of the French Revolution and toured Britain with her wax models; in 1835 she opened a permanent waxworks exhibition in London (1761-1850).
Maltese: the national language of the Republic of Malta; a Semitic language derived from Arabic but with many loan words from Italian, Spanish, and Norman-French.
Abbe: a French abbot.
Frog: a person of French descent.
Ibert: French composer (1890-1962).
Jean Antoine Watteau: French painter (1684-1721).
Acadian: an early French settler in the Maritimes.
Alfred De Musset: French poet and writer (1810-1857).
Maquis: a guerrilla fighter in the French underground in World War II.
Degas: French impressionist painter (1834-1917).
Gavotte: an old formal French dance in quadruple time.
Pot-Au-Feu: traditional French stew of vegetables and beef.
Haute Cuisine: (French) an elaborate and skillful manner of preparing food.
Jean-Paul Sartre: French writer and existentialist philosopher (1905-1980).
Jacques Offenbach: French composer of many operettas and an opera (1819-1880).
Maurice Ravel: French composer and exponent of Impressionism (1875-1937).
Oriflamme: a red or orange-red flag used as a standard by early French kings.
Exocet: a guided missile developed by the French government for use against ships.
Acadia: the French-speaking part of the Canadian Maritime Provinces.
Mayday: an internationally recognized distress signal via radiotelephone (from the French m`aider).
Abelard: French philosopher and theologian; lover of Heloise (1079-1142).
Comte De Saxe: a French marshal who distinguished himself in the War of the Austrian Succession (1696-1750).
Babar: an imaginary elephant that appears in a series of French books for children.
Secession: an Austrian school of art and architecture parallel to the French art nouveau in the 1890s.
Pierrot: a male character in French pantomime; usually dressed in white with a whitened face.
Daumier: French painter best known for his satirical lithographs of bourgeois society (1808-1879).
Bernard Hinault: French racing cyclist who won the Tour de France five times (born in 1954).
Cambodia: a nation in southeastern Asia; was part of Indochina under French rule until 1946.