I love what you are doing, I like very much what you are doing
Jaime well when you do it for me
Que faites-vous ces jours-ci? in French means "What have you been doing recently?" in English.
Comment faites-vous?
vous faites mon jour
What are you doing ? (You Plural Form informal)
The answer is either oui for 'yes', or non for 'no'. For the question 'Vous faites beaucoup' means Are you doing a lot [of things]? In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'. The verb 'faites' means '[you] are doing, do do, do'. The adverb 'beaucoup' means 'a great deal, a lot'.
Jaime well when you do it for me
Que faites-vous? in French is "What do you do?" in English.
"When translated to English, 'Que faites-vous aujourd'hui' means 'What are you doing today?'"
"(vous) faites" is "(you) are doing" in French.
Que faites-vous ces jours-ci? in French means "What have you been doing recently?" in English.
faites-vous = do you, are you doing / making aimez-vous marcher dans le Clair de lune = do you like to walk in the moonlight
"J'espère que vous vous amusez. Vous me manquez beaucoup" "I hope you're having fun. I miss you much"
the correct form is "vous faites bien" meaning "you are doing well/ doing the right thing" ... unless it is part of a phrase like "vous êtes bien faites" meaning that (addressing girls or women) "you are well-shaped"
I make you laugh nonstop
lets us go to the mall
'What are you doing?' is the translation for 'qu'est-ce que vous faites'.