You don't say it in English or French, any "to" time is limited to a short number of minutes, not 50, which would be "it is 10 past 1AM" in English, or "il est une heure dix (du matin)" in French.
There is no AM/PM in French since we usually use the 24-hour notation, so "une heure" means "1AM" and "treize heure" (13 hours) means "1PM". But "du matin" (in the morning) or "de l'après-midi" (in the afternoon) or "du soir" (in the evening) may be added in case the simpler 12-hour notation is used, if it may not be clear to the person what part of the day (or week) it is...
Cinquante minutes.
cinquante
Dix-sept heures is 5:50 P.M. in French.
il a cinquante ans.
Cinquante euros
"Thirty to fifty" is "trente à cinquante" in French.
'cinquante à cent'
trente à cinquante
cinquante pour cent
I have absolutly no idea! Go ask some french guy....
What is 50 minutes afte
62 minutes divide by 50 minutes = 1.24