"Voulez-vous coucher avec moi ce soir?" translates to "Would you like to go to bed with me tonight?"
"Voulez-vous coucher avec moi (ce soir)?" means "Do you want to sleep with me (tonight)?"
S'assoit is French for "sits". If, in the off chance you were referring to the line spoken in the song "Lady Marmalade" from the 2001 film Moulin Rouge, you were wondering the meaning of the words "ce soir", this translates to "tonight".
a lady who works in IT
Une dame = a lady
Voulez vou couche avec moi, sessoir? = Would you like to go to bed with me, tonight?
If you're talking about the Lady Marmalade song, it doesn't mean anything it was just added to the song to give it more sex appeal. Not if you're familiar with New Orleans and the Creole dialect. It's French Quarter speak for "get sex (or a more vulgar word for 'vagina') here, daddy".
One song is Lady Marmalade by Labelle.
madame refers to of the lady of the house
Notre Dame means our lady in french. Our lady is the English translation
You mean like in your lady parts?
''The lady full of wisdom''
''Mesdames bonjour'' would mean ''Hello Ladies''.