Je marche Ã? la maison is a way to use the preceding words in a sentence.
Specifically, the pronoun je means "I." The verb marche means "(I) am walking, do walk, walk." The preposition Ã? means "to." The feminine singular definite article la means "the." The feminine noun maison means "house."
The pronunciation is "zhuh mahr-shah lah meh-zoh."
The correct French phrase is "Je vais à la maison." This means "I am going home" in English.
Some French words that contain "IE" or "AI" are: pied (foot), chien (dog), vie (life), aide (help), maison (house), fraise (strawberry), lait (milk), jamais (never), soleil (sun), peinture (paint).
"Et" means "and" in French. It is used to connect two words or phrases together in a sentence.
The sentence "J'aimeleschatsetaussileschiens" can be separated into individual words as follows: "J'aime les chats et aussi les chiens."
Some French words have capital letters, but the rules for capitalizing words are different in French than in English. For example, "I live in Paris" is "J'habite à Paris," but "The language that I speak is French" is "La langue que je parle c'est français."
Some English words that are similar to French words include: Date (English) / Date (French) Cafe (English) / Café (French) Table (English) / Table (French) Animal (English) / Animal (French)
"Maison de vacances"
'la maison des papillons'
The preposition "on" in French is 'sur'. It is pronounced (sir) or (suhr).For a switch that turns "on" and "off" the words would be marche (go) and arrêt (stop).
In French, "the French house" is "La maison française". You would pronounce this like "lah mays-on fron-sez". To put this together, you need to know two words: the noun "house", which is "maison" and the adjective "French", which is "français". In French nouns are either masculine or feminine, so when you say "the house" you have to say "la maison" because "la" is the feminine version of "the" (maison is feminine). Adjectives almost always go behind the nouns they describe in French. This is different from how adjectives are placed in English. In English, we say "the French house", where French goes before house. In French, you say, (if you're translating directly) "the house French", or "la maison française". Adjectives in French are modified depending on the gender of the noun. Since "la maison" is feminine, you add an "e" to the end of the adjective. So "français" becomes "française" Also, in French, you don't capitalize some adjectives that are capitalized in English. In English, we capitalize the names of languages or nationalities like French (or Turkish or Swedish). In French, those aren't capitalized, so when you write "française", you don't capitalize it.
to be honest with you, there are as many french words as there are as many english words, so according to this, im not sure what french words you're looking for, so i will just list a sentence with four english words translated to french (or more like a french sentence translated to english):J'ai besoin de plus d'informations.I need more information.
ça fonctionne mais ça ne marche pas. This is a play on words. French may say about any device that it is working / in working order (fonctionner), but also using the verb "marcher" (to walk). Ex: ma montre fonctionne, mais elle ne marche pas : my watch is working, but it does not walk / work.
banane (banana), orange, facile (easy), anglais (English), blue / bleue (blue), fleur (flower), gâteau (cake), eau (water), maison (house)
It doesn't mean anything in french, the words are existing but the sentence means nothing
bonjour, merci, la maison, le soleil, le jour, la lune, la nuit (Hello, thank you, the house, the sun, the day, the moon, the night)
Pas Parsee is french for Bullying- For more french words ask the question -Whats a french word? A sentence with Paparsee in it in French- Gee Moaka Pas Parsee gollai pexci Loash iaes. in english- The same sentence as above- They are bullying the poor knew kid
individually the words means to answer ( repondre) that (que) and no (non) and as a sentence it either means " answer no" as an order or if it's taken from a longer sentence you polite/ you plural answer no.
Conduire voiture is written in French. In English it means to drive a car. Obtaining a permit to drive a car would have these words in French in the sentence.