"Enjoy yourself!" in English is Amuse-toi bien! in French.
et toi? as in "ca va bien, et toi?"
"You too. Many (good) things for you!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Toi de même. Bien des choses � toi! The wish translates literally into English as "You, the same. Many things to you!" The pronunciation will be "twad mem byad sho-za twa" in northerly French and "twa duh meh-muh byeng dey sho-zuh-sz twa" in southerly French.
J'aime bien means I like
and you too
Very well, and you?
Tiens-toi bien means 'sit straight!' (or 'stand straight') in English. In the figurative sense, that could mean 'behave yourself well'
"Je vais bien et pour toi ma fillete" means "I'm going fine, and what about you, my girl" in English.
bonnee fete benoit amuse toi bien
"bien, et toi ?" is the answer people make when they are asked "how do you do?" It means "fine, and you?"
"porte-toi bien / soigne-toi bien / guéris bien"
"porte-toi bien / soigne-toi bien / guéris bien"
"Enjoy yourself!" in English is Amuse-toi bien! in French.
"Get better!" in English is Soigne-toi bien! to someone the same age or younger and Soignez-vous bien! to someone older in French.
It means 'very well thank you, and you ?'. This is the standard reply when a friend asks 'Comment ca va ?' (how goes it?)
"amuse-toi" or "amuse-toi bien"
et toi? as in "ca va bien, et toi?"