c'est moi qui te parle : it's ME who is talking to you
"fo ke je te parle" is text language for "il faut que je te parle" meaning "I need to talk to you".
'et moi je te ... (+ verb)' means 'and I ... (verb) you' in French. Ex: et moi je te préviens que ... > 'and I'm warning you that ...'
je ne te parle pas je ne vous parle pas (more formal, but still direct)
now that I'm speaking to you
It means "call me please," usually in the context of telephone communications. The sentence should read "Appelle-moi, s'il te plaît"
oui
"Est-ce que tu te rappelles / tu te souviens encore de moi ?"
je te parle plus tard
The English meaning of the Latin sentence 'Praesta te eum qui mihi est cognitus' is Be responsible for what is known to me, Be responsible for what I know. In the word-by-word translation, the verb 'praesta' means 'be responsible'. The personal pronoun 'te' means 'you'. The relative 'eum qui' means 'that which'. The personal pronoun 'mihi' means 'to me'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The past participle 'cognitus' means 'known'.
Donnez-m'en un, s'il vous plaît. (As appropriate, change "donnez" to "donne", "vous" to "te" and "un" to "une".) You might also hear in casual speech "donne-moi-z-en" instead of "donne-m'en", but it is considered incorrect.
"Bonjour, est-ce-que vous vous rappelez de moi?" "Bonjour, est-ce-que tu te rappelles de moi?" (informal)
qui reflète le monde