There is no such expression in German.
Main is the name of a German river.
Mann translates as man, husband
Depending on context, Mann can be translated as man or husband
Le main means (the) hand.
Sollie Mann has written: 'Mann's speller-divider' -- subject(s): English language, Spellers, Syllabication
C. Mann has written: 'A concordance to the English poems of George Herbert'
where is your husband
Stuart E Mann has written: 'An historical Albania-English dictionary'
Well at first it depends on whether it is meant to be "Mann" or "man". the German "Mann" is "man" in English. the German "man" is a sort of "you" that doesn't really exist in English. Tranlated "Mann/man kann alles verlieren außer Hoffnung"would be: " (a) man / you can lose everything but hope"
JasonKeeleeMannMa DearSaraRalphAunt MaryJourneyMoo mooGraceWilliamKeelee's momKeishaCarlotta
Ich bin dein Mann = I am your husband
this is where i grew up
MAI THIK HOON in English
"Raise your hand""french for "raise your hand"