"Ah but who, sir?"
It is pronounced as "key eh vol tre ah guhn."
To whom or Whose may be English equivalents of 'Ã? qui'. The preposition 'Ã?' means 'to'. The interrogative/relative 'qui' means 'who, whom'. Together, they're pronounced 'ah kee'.
"ah bon je ne suis pas à l'école encore, mais je serai là -bas bientôt" means "OK I'm still not at school, but I will be there soon"
Ah mais pourquoi tu you parlais pas en franais alors"why you do not speak french right now?", I think this private question is just for bothering the users of answers.com.seulment je pense qu le questionaire n'a aucune but a interogger cette question.
Ah Neelah means smart or intelligence.
Ahso / Ah-so / Ah so / Ah so desu ka "Ah, it is so" "Ah, yes" "Yes, it is so" "Yes, it is" "Yes, that's the way it is" "It is thus"
It means: "ah,(insult to your mom), bye"
"ah bon" can mean different things depending on context or the tone of voice in which it is said. "Ah bon?" in a surprised tone of voice means "Really?" "Ah bon." in a regular tone of voice mean "allright", or "ok" "ah bon..." in a resigned tone of voice means "whatever", or "if you say so..."
Ah, the beach again !
affirmative
"Who killed Grandma?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qui a tué grand-maman?Specifically, the interrogative qui means "who?" The auxiliary a with the past participle tuémeans "has killed, killed." The feminine noun grand-mamanmeans "grandma."The pronunciation will be "kee ah twey graw-mahmah" in French.
i don't know. maybe a cheer or just words to fill in the blanks