sans toi, je suis rien
Sans being French for "without" I would think you're looking for Avec, French for "with"
"Nothing" is an English equivalent of the French word "rien."Specifically, the French word is an indefinite pronoun. But it also can be a masculine noun. But either way, the meaning and the pronunciation are the same: "ryeh."
French. After the Norman conquest French had such a impact on the English language that Middle English looks nothing like Old English, because we adopted and adapted so many of their words!
"Nothing new!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Rien de nouveau! The prepositional phrase also translates as "No news!" in English. The pronunciation will be "ryad noo-vo" in northerly French and "ryeng duh noo-vo" in southerly French.
Nothing, it is just the stage name of Jean-Baptiste Poquelin.
Rien is a literal French equivalent of the English word "nothing." The pronunciation of the masculine singular noun will be "rya" in French.
The French phrase 'sans paroles' translates to "without words" in English.
That means nothing in French in the first place.
Rien aujourd'hui.
"Nothing included!" and "Nothing understood!" are English equivalents of the French phrase Rien compris! Context makes clear which translation suits. The pronunciation will be "rya ko-pree" in French.
nothing is different
Nothing... it's a mix with french and English.
'Orléans' is the name of a big town South of Paris. It does not mean anything in English (and nothing in French, too)
You use a French - English dictionary.
le vallia means nothing in French.
"The child" is an English equivalent of the French phrase l'enfant. The masculine singular phrase may be found translated into English without "the" since French uses the definite article where English does and does not. The pronunciation will be "law-faw" in French.
Je n'ai rien à dire in French means "I have nothing to say" in English.