Mais c'est qui ? means 'but who is it?' in English.
This isn't a complete sentence, but what you wrote translates to "...'who' but it's okay".
"qui est la" ==> Who is the
Spring which begins...
"C'est qui ça" means "who is that?"
Qui est sur la photo? in French means "Who is in the photo?" in English.
This isn't a complete sentence, but what you wrote translates to "...'who' but it's okay".
The phrase 'mais qui' means But who[m]. In the word-by-word translation, the conjuction 'mais' means 'but'. And the conjunction 'qui' means 'who, who[m]'.
"désolé, mais qui es-tu ?" is translated "Sorry, but who are you?" in English.
But, who can stop (+ someone/something) ?
It means This is part of that.
"Désolé, mais qui êtes-vous ?" means "Sorry, but who are you?"
Answer #1 by Ginezumi The question 'Mais qui peut you stopper?' contains a mixture of English, French, and Frenchified English. The word 'you' needs to be written 'te', as the second person singular; or 'vous', as the second person plural. In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'mais' means 'but'. The conjunction 'qui' means 'who'. The verb 'peut' means 'he/she/it] can'. And the personal pronoun 'te' or 'vous' means 'you'. The question therefore means But who can stop you?Answer #2 by Monkeytypist In standard French, the question would be mais qui peut vous arrêter? or mais qui peut t'arrêter?
"Ah but who, sir?"
"qui mais je t'aime plus bébé" translates literally as "who but I love you more darling" in French.
"But who are you?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Mais qui êtes vous?Specifically, the conjunction mais is "but". The relative pronoun qui means "who". The verb êtes means "(informal plural) you all, (formal singular) you". The personal pronoun vous translates as "(informal plural) you all, (formal singular) you".The pronunciation will be "meh kee eht voo" in French.
Qui? = Who? Occasionally 'which' or 'that'.
qui a le ... means 'who has the ... / which has the ...'