"Lehr dyoo taw" is the pronunciation, and "the current climate" or "the prevailing atmosphere" is the meaning, of the French phrase l'air du temps.
Specifically, the masculine definite article le* means "the." The masculine noun air literally means "air." The word ducombines the preposition de with the masculine article le to mean "of the." The masculine noun tempsmeans "time, weather."
*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced temporarily by an apostrophe -- before a noun which begins with a vowel.
The French phrase 'l'air du temps' translates to "the spirit of the times" in English. It is pronounced as "lehr doo tohn." It refers to the prevailing attitudes, trends, or cultural climate of a particular period or era.
"Ee-ley taw kuh zhuh pahrt" is the pronunciation of the French phrase Il est temps que je parte.Specifically, the masculine pronoun il means "he, it." The verb est means "(he/it/she) is." The masculine noun temps means "time." The conjunction que means "that." The personal pronoun je means "I." The verb partemeans "(I) leave, may leave."
"A quel temps" is a French phrase that translates to "At what time" in English. It is commonly used when asking about a specific time or schedule.
You would say "Le temps n'a pas de sens" in French.
Bon temps is a French word meaning "good time" or "good weather." It is commonly used in Louisiana Creole culture to describe a festive or enjoyable occasion.
Quel temps fait-il aujourd'hui? = How's the weather today?
Quel temps fait-il? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "What is the weather?" The question translates literally as "What weather does it make?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kel taw feh-teel" in French.
"Ee-ley taw kuh zhuh pahrt" is the pronunciation of the French phrase Il est temps que je parte.Specifically, the masculine pronoun il means "he, it." The verb est means "(he/it/she) is." The masculine noun temps means "time." The conjunction que means "that." The personal pronoun je means "I." The verb partemeans "(I) leave, may leave."
"Time traveler" is an English equivalent of the French phrase voyageur de temps.Specifically, the masculine noun voyageur is "traveler, voyager". The preposition de means "of". The masculine noun temps translates as "time, weather".The pronunciation will be "vwah-ya-zhuhr duh taw" in French.
"What time (weather)..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase ce que le temps... . The pronunciation of the uncompleted dependent clause will be "skul taw" in northerly French and "suh kuh luh taw" in southerly French.
"Time of the hunt" is one English equivalent of the French phrase temps de la chasse.Specifically, the masculine noun temps is "time, weather". The preposition de means "of". The feminine singular definite article la means "the". The feminine noun chasse translates as "hunt".The pronunciation will be "taw duh la shass" in French.
The phrase Le temps est variable translate into English as The weather is variable meaning that the temperature will change.
"It's time to confront Facebook" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il est temps de faire face au Facebook. The pronunciation will be "ee-ley taw duh fer fa-so feys-book" in French.
"Schedule" and "timetable" are two English equivalents of the French phrase emploi du temps.Specifically, the masculine noun emploi literally is "employment, job, work." The word du means "of the" from the combination of the preposition de ("of") and the masculine singular definite article le ("the"). The masculine noun temps translates as "time, weather" according to context.The pronunciation will be "aw-plwah dyoo taw" in French.
"Good-times kitty-cat" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Minouche des bons temps. The pronunciation of the feline-related prepositional phrase -- which references a Pensacola Pelican Press publication by Jack Fabian and which translates literally as "kitty-cat of the good times" and loosely as "Fun-loving kitty-cat" -- will be "mee-noosh dey bo taw" in French.
French for "good times", as in the phrase "Laissez le bon temps rouler" (let the good times roll)
these are scrambled French words: fait from the verb faire (to do), temps meaning weather, y a : is there, and soleil meaning sun. The whole is French for two-year olds.
Et quel temps fait-il aujourd'hui? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "And how is the weather today?" The question translates literally as "And what weather does it do (make) today?" in English. The pronunciation will be "ey kel taw feh-teel o-zhoor-dwee" in French.