It’s prêt étudiant. I know because I have one with a French bank and that’s what is says on my monthy statement.
BTW, don’t rely on online translators, unless you know the language a little bit, so you can use common knowledge to see if it’s correct. Translators do so word for word, and a lot of times , the answer makes no sense. Example: going the other way:french to english
"Je m’en fou" means basically "I wash my hands of it" or "I’m not going to worry about it"
the translator says it means "I myself in crazy!"
see what i mean.
un prêt étudiant
un prêt étudiant
For both. French is hard… wish i knew it. Next time you need a translate just google >> Online translation <<
PRÊT D’ÉTUDIANT
It’s prêt étudiant. I know because I have one with a French bank and that’s what is says on my monthy statement.
BTW, don’t rely on online translators, unless you know the language a little bit, so you can use common knowledge to see if it’s correct. Translators do so word for word, and a lot of times , the answer makes no sense. Example: going the other way:french to english
"Je m’en fou" means basically "I wash my hands of it" or "I’m not going to worry about it"
the translator says it means "I myself in crazy!"
see what i mean.
student loan = (un, le, mon, etc.) prêt étudiant (masculine singular)
student loans = (des, les, mes, etc.) prêts étudiants (masculine plural)