Vivi la tua vita e basta! is one Italian equivalent of the English phrase "Just live your life!"
Specifically, the present imperative vivi is "(informal singular you) live!" The feminine singular definite article la means "the." The feminine possessive adjective tua means "(informal singular) your." The feminine noun vita means "life." The conjunction e means "and." The present indicative bastatranslates as "(it) is enough!"
The pronunciation will be "VEE-vee la TOO-a VEE-ta ey BA-sta" in Italian.
It is a French word which means " That's Life / This is Life".
In french, when an article that finish by a vowel goes in a front of a noun starting with a vowel (or a pronoun in a front of a verb), they put an apostophe and cut a vowel... (maybe some exeption exist?)
"C'est la vie", is
Ça est la vie (that is the life, word by word)
they put an aposthrophe to cut the letter "a" and link
-remark the cedilla ¸ (alt+0184 and U+00B8) under the C (looks like a number 5 under a c letter some time) because, when letter c is in the front of letter a, letter o, or letter u, will be prononced like a letter k without (like in "Cut"), and with = the cedilla under the c, it is prononced s (like in "Century"), and it disappears, turning useless, because it became in the front of an e.
C'est la vie! in French is È la vita! in Italian.
French
'C'est la vie' is actually the correct way to say "That's life" or "It's life". Sa la vie would not make sense in French, as 'sa' (meaning his or her) has a different meaning than 'C'est' (meaning It's/That's)
Bewitched-c'est la vie Magnum and Slade both released tracks featuring Cest la vie
French for "That's life," or "Such is life."
Roughly " That's life" in English, "Asi es la vida" in Spanish.
In French: Un aveugle a dit: «Etre capable de voir, c'est la vie."In English: A blind man once said, "Being able to see, that's life."
Robbie Nevill
'For life'
La vie = life dans = in It appears the sentence, or phrase is incomplete. FYI: dans la vie = "in life". As in: (What you do) "for a living", "your work", "your career"
"maison de la vie" measn "house (or home) of Life" in French.
c'est la vie
In the poem "C'est La Vie" by Maurice Yvonne, the speaker reflects on life's uncertainties and ups and downs. The poem explores themes of acceptance and resilience in the face of life's challenges, rather than focusing on a specific conflict or argument between individuals.