A bathroom directly connected to a bedroom is often called an en-suite bathroom. Its use is primarily intended for the occupants of that bedroom only. In French the term "en-suite" literally means "a following", in this case referring to the bathroom being part of the bedroom to which it is attached. Found this in Wikipdeia's definition for bathroom.
Then
ensuite, à la suite, postérieurement, puis
In English, "What do I do afterward?"
That sounds very French, but that doesn't mean anything.
ver mean wormvers mean towardboth sound the same in french
It's not French
ensuite
et aprés, ensuite
After that: ensuite, et après
ensuite (one word) means 'then' in French. en suite can mean several rooms in a hotel that are available as an apartment
Depending on context it could be either:Puis, ensuite, alors or donc
après cela', 'après ça', 'ensuite'
Est-ce que vous allez jouer ensuite?
Translation: Il est mari'e, ensuite reculez.
Bette G. Hirsch has written: 'Ensuite' -- subject(s): English, French language, Textbooks for foreign speakers
Neither 'en suite' nor 'en-suite', meaning 'then', are correct in French. Use "ensuite" (a single, non-hyphenated word)
Ensuite refers to hotel rooms having their own bathroom and toilet facilities. Somewhere like a hostel would not have that as they would have communal bathrooms and toilets.
toilet, washbasin, shower and bidet