"Always in our hearts and our country does she stay"
In Cajun French, "toujours dans nos cœurs et notre pays reste elle" means "always in our hearts and our country, she remains." It likely refers to someone who is dearly missed but always remembered and cherished in both heart and homeland.
"None left" in French can be translated as "plus rien" or "plus aucun".
The meaning of the sentence is: "Yes, how are you? Which city do you live in?"
You can say "Je reste simplement à me reposer" in French.
Spanish: Mantente seguro siempre. French: Reste en sécurité toujours. German: Bleib immer sicher. Italian: Stai sicuro sempre. Japanese: いつも安全にしてください (Itsumo anzen ni shite kudasai). Chinese (Mandarin): 时刻保持安全 (Shíkè bǎochí ānquán).
'the rest of the week' in french is 'Le reste de la semaine'. If you want to know any more french words, I would suggest that you go on google translate, as you can select English to french (or most other languages for that matter), type in any sentence in, and it will show you how it is written, and there is a button for the pronunciation. The actual days of the week are as follows: Monday-Lundi Tuesday-Mardi Wednesday-Mecredi Thursday-Jeudi Friday-Vendredi Saturday-Samedi Sunday-Dimanche. Hope this article helps!
Un coeur amoureux reste toujours jeune means 'a loving heart stays young forever'
le temps se réduit, il ne reste plus longtemps
reste vrai / reste fidèle
Reste.
Reste ici
Elle reste à la maison in French means "She stays at home" in English.
rest from shopping in French is: reste des boutiques
Reste pour la nuit.
In French, stay the same = reste le/la même (it depends on whom you talk to : "le" refers to a man and "la" refers to a woman). "Reste" comes from the verb "rester".
French speakers would say "on reste en contact" for "keep in touch"
je me reste a ma chambre
Je reste pour un mois.