I think you mis-heard or mis-read something. It means "goodbye not hole"
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"Au revoir" is French for "goodbye" and "ne trou" does not have a direct translation in French. It seems like a combination of words from different languages or a typo.
You say "trou profond" in French.
You would say "trou dans la tête" in French.
I believe you mean "je ne sais pas" which means "I don't know" No, I didn't mean "je ne sais pas," I meant "Je ne s'paul." The person phrased it specifically that way.
"Good bye" in Creole can be translated as "Aurevoir" in Haitian Creole.
"Tu ne parles pas français" means "You do not speak French" in French.
aurevoir
good bye love
le trou means 'the hole' in English. In familiar speech, a lost and little-animated village is 'un trou'.
The French word aurevoir means good bye in English.
Hole.
au revoir means goodbyeliterally is means see you again
Trou is French for hole Macaque is French for monkey Trou Macaque is either a Monkey hole or a hole monkey.
The population of Trou-du-Nord is 37,405.
literaly trouve le trou ! (imperative)
The Trou aux Cerfs is 150yrs old
The population of Petit-Trou-de-Nippes is 36,143.
8 cylinder hole up goat