C'est incomplet
"How do you say...?" is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Comment dit-on...? The question translates literally as "How does one say...?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw dee-to" in French.
"Do you say in French...?" is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Dit-on en français...? The question translates literally as "Does one say in French...?" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee-to aw fraw-seh" in French.
incomplet
"I can't say anything..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Je ne peux rien dire... . The declarative statement also translates as "I can say nothing" in English. The pronunciation will be "zuhn puh rya deer" in French.
"To say what..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase pour dire ce que... . The prepositional phrase literally translates by word order into English as "in order to say (tell) that which... ." The pronunciation will be "poor deer skuh" in northerly French and "poor deer suh kuh" in southerly French.
Incomplete question - does not say who 'he' is.
Incomplete question - does not say who 'he' is
Incomplete question - does not say what 'it' is
Incomplete question - does not say who 'them' is
"If to you it..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase S'il vous... . The pronunciation will be "seel voo" in French.
"Is the" is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase est le.Specifically, the present indicative verb est means "(he/it/one/she) is." The masculine singular definite article le translates as "the." The pronunciation will be "eh luh" in French.
"Very Marty" is a literally English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase très Marti. The incomplete declaration also translates less literally as "(That's so) like Marty!" in English. The pronunciation will be "treh mar-tee" in French.