[It] can be frozen is an English equivalent of 'peut être congelé'. The verb 'peut' means '[he/she/it] can or is able'. The infinitive 'être' means 'to be'. The masculine adjective 'congelé' means 'frozen'. All together, they're pronounced 'puh-tehtr koh-jeh-leh'.
[It] can be frozen is an English equivalent of 'peut
[He/she/it] can be is an English equivalent of 'peut être'. The verb 'peut' means '[he/she/it] can or is able'. The infinitive 'être' means 'to be'. Together, they're pronounced 'puh-tehtr'.peut-être means perhaps or maybe
peut-être (pronounce pert e-tre)
This is french for very good
That is not Spanish but French, it needs "très" not "tre's" and it means very pretty skirt.
a centimeter is the (American) English spelling for the French "centimètre". It is usually spelled "centimetre" in British English.
Andre S. Labarthe has written: 'Comment peut-on e tre Martien?'
no
Due, tre in Italian means "Two, three" in English.
a meter is spelled 'un mètre' in French.
The term means 'You and I 3 meters above the sky' when translated into English. This is a french term and is probably used for showing love and affection.
"Three couples" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase tre coppie.Specifically, the number tre means "three." The feminine noun coppie means "couples." The pronunciation is "treh KOHP-pyeh."
"Theater of the Old" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Théâtre du Vieux. The performing arts-related phrase also translates into English as "Theater of the Ancient" or "Theater of the Elderly" according to context. The pronunciation will be "tey-at dyoo vyuh" in northerly French and "tey-a-truh dyoo vyuh" in southerly French.