aimer chaque jour
Use a French dictionary to translate each word or you can use an online translator.
Aloha, Maika'i, Ola.....this is the translation for each word.
Chacun ses goûts.
Di is an Italian equivalent of the French word de.Specifically, the French and the Italian words are both prepositions. They each translate as "of, from." The pronunciations are "dee" in Italian and "duh" in French.
De is a French equivalent of the Italian word di.Specifically, the French and the Italian words are both prepositions. They each translate as "of, from." The pronunciations are "dee" in Italian and "duh" in French.
Yes, it is. It would ordinarily be an adjective phrase.
It means, "to each his own taste".
Well there's a similar saying in France that goes "les chiens aboient, la caravane passe". Now, don't try and translate it word for word because it's literal translation is nothing similar (the dogs bark when the caravan passes). But, that is what it means in French.
Bouffe délicieuse informally and nourriture délicieuse formally are French equivalents of the English phrase "tasty food." The feminine singular noun and adjective in each case translate literally into English as "delicious food." The respective pronunciations will be "boof dey-lee-syuhz" informally and "noo-ree-tyoor dey-lee-syuhz" formally in French.
you can use google translate.
"Write one sentence each day!" is one English equivalent of the French phrase Écris une phrase chaque jour!Specifically, the imperative verb écris is "(informal singular you) write!" The number une means "one". The feminine noun phrase means "phrase, sentence". The feminine/masculine adjective chaque means "each, every". The masculine noun jour translates as "day".The pronunciation will be "ey-kree yoon frahz shahk zhoor" in French.
In Spanish, you would say "¿Vas a venir hoy?" In French, it translates to "Tu viens aujourd'hui ?" In German, you would say "Kommst du heute?" Each phrase asks if someone is coming today.