The count from one to ten in Portuguese is um, dois, três, quatro, cinco, seis, sete, oito, nove and dez.
Translation: (Note, I made some assumptions about missing punctuation) If only you knew how how much I love you. If you knew that you are my everything. Maybe, then you would know exactly how much you mean to me. I love you.
um, dois, três, quatro, cinco, seis, sete, oito, nove, dez, onze, doze, treze, quatorze (or catorze), quinze, dezesseis, dezessete, dezoito, dezenove, vinte.
1 = um 2 = dois 3 = treiz 4 = cuatro 5 = cinco 6 = seiz 7 = sete (se-chi) 8 = oito 9 = nove 10 = deiz
Here are a few pointers to get you going Bonjour - Pronounced Bonjor - Means Hello Je mappelle - J mapple I hope this helps for morehelp go to Google translater Please & thankyou
"Je dois" in French translates to "I have to" in English. It indicates an obligation or necessity to do something.
je dois travaille
"je dois" I have to leave = je dois m'en aller I have to work harder = je dois travailler plus dur
Que dois-je faire ? = What must I do ?
I have to study hard
I must - je dois
je dois aller (quelque part) maintenant : I must go (somewhere) nowje dois m'en aller maintenant: I have to leave now, I must go now
je dois y aller, je dois m'en aller
il faut que je .... or je dois ..
je dois is prononced something like 'juh - dwah"
Must I carry or wear......? (it should be - dois-je porter......?)
Depends if you mean "I'm outta here!" or "Where's the washroom?" "I'm outta here!" Je dois y aller /or/ je dois m'en aller "Where's the washroom" où sont les toilettes, je dois aller aux toilettes.