"il est temps pour toi d'en vivre une nouvelle" means "it is time for you to live a new one".
"Let's go! Let the good times roll with me!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Allons! Laissez les bons temps rouler avec moi! The exclamatory statements most famously serve as a variation on the popular Cajun French song from Louisiana. The pronunciation will be "a-lo leh-sey ley bo taw roo-ley a-vek mwa" in French.
je perds mon temps means - I'm wasting my time, I've got better things to do with my time.
Le Temps was created in 1998.
let's make good times.
at every moment I'm thinking of you
Avoir du bon temps in French means "To have a good time" in English.
"How is the weather?" in English is Quel temps fait-il?in French.
"How is the weather today?" in English is Quel temps fait-il aujourd'hui? in French.
Comment vas-tu après tout ce temps? in French is "How are you after all this time?" in English.
Quel temps fait-il? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "What is the weather?" The question translates literally as "What weather does it make?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kel taw feh-teel" in French.
"le temps de votre vie" is "the time of your life", but it looks like a literal translation from English, it is not something a French would say.
quel est l'emploi du temps pour aujourd'hui
Translation: Let the good times roll on...
"laisse le bon temps rouler"
"Best day ever!" in English is La meilleure journée de tous les temps! in French.
The word "temps" in French can be translated into English as "time" (je n'ai pas le temps de faire ça = I haven't got the time to do that), "weather" (que temps fait-il = how's the weather?), or "tense" (un temps simple = a simple tense).
"What time (weather)..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase ce que le temps... . The pronunciation of the uncompleted dependent clause will be "skul taw" in northerly French and "suh kuh luh taw" in southerly French.