Charlie Dees is 6 feet 1 inches tall. He weighs 173 pounds. He bats left and throws left.
2010 (the number or the year) -- deux mille dix -- "duh meel deess"
"Soixante-dix" is a French Canadian equivalent of the English number "seventy."Specifically, the number "soixante" means "sixty (60)." The number "dix" means "ten (10)." The pronunciation is "swah-saw-deess" or "swah-sawn-tuh-deess."Particularly along Canada's southeastern border with the United States of America, it still is possible to find French speakers who use the Acadian term "septante." This word means "seventy." The pronunciation is "sehp-tawn-tuh."
Un, du, toi, catra seink, soit, wete, nuf Un, deux, trois, quatre, cinq, six, sept, huit, neuf, dix which to me sound like urn, dur, trwa,katre,sank,seess,sett,weet,nu(r)f, deess
"Soixante-dix" is a French equivalent of the English number "seventy."Specifically, the number "soixante" means "sixty (60)." The number "dix" means "ten (10)." This is the way the number is translated into French as it generally is spoken in Paris and central France. There are other options in other parts of France and in other French-speaking areas of Europe and North America.The pronunciation is "swah-saw-deess."
9h51 = neuf heures cinquante-et-un (du matin), or dix heures (du matin) moins neuf minutes. (nuhv urr sank-ahnt-ay-UHN doo ma-TAHN, or deess urr du ma-TAHN mwahn nuhf mee-NOOT) The "du matin" (in the morning) is optional. The French use a 24-hour clock, so 9:51 pm would most likely be stated as 21h51. If you don't specify "du matin" it is assumed.
un (eh[n])deux (duh)trois (trwah)quatre (katr)cinq (seh[n]k)six ("cease")sept ("set")huit (eweet)neuf (nuhf)dix (deess)