"Zhe swee" doesn't have a meaning in French. It might be misspelled or not be a proper French phrase. If you provide more context or clarify, I'd be happy to help translate or explain.
You would say "Je suis rouge" in French to mean "I am red."
You can say "Je suis ici" in French to mean "I am here."
It is pronounced as "shair-ree swiss" in French.
"Zhuh swee luh wa" is a way to pronounce the French phrase Je suis le roi! The declaration translates literally as "I am the king!" or "I'm the king!" in English. It also will be translated as "I am king!" or "I'm king!" since French employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the."
Non, je ne suis pas français and Oui, je suis français are replies in French to the French question Est-ce que tu es français? The answers and the question respectively translate as "No, I'm not French," "Yes, I am French" and "Are you French?" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "no zuhn swee pa fraw-seh," "wea zhuh swee fraw-seh" and "eh-skuh tyoo eh fraw-seh" in French.
Je suis (pronounced dzuh swee)
The English meaning of 'Je pense' is I think. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'je' means 'I'. And the verb 'pense' means '[he/she/it] thinks'.
Je suis (pronounced juh swee)
suis sounds like swee Example: je suis = I am
Goh Swee Swee was born on 1986-06-02.
Je suis son monde [zger swee sohn mohnd]
je suis une dame (zhuh swee zewn dahm)
"Je suis anglaise" in the feminine and "Je suis anglais" in the masculine are French equivalents of the English phrase "I am English."Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "suis" means "(I) am." The feminine adjective/noun "anglaise" and the masculine "anglais" mean "English."The respective pronunciations are "zhuh swee aw-glehz" and "zhuh swee aw-gleh."
je suis a toi (ju swee a twah)
You would say "Je suis rouge" in French to mean "I am red."
I dont know, but in mandrin chinese, it is yi zhe
Je suis rugbyman or Je suis joueur de rugby and Je suis rugbywoman or Je suis joueuse de rugby are French equivalents of the English phrase "I am a rugby player." Context makes clear whether feminine (cases 1, 2) or masculine (examples 3, 4) gender suits. The respective pronunciations will be "zhuh swee ryoog-bee-man" or "zhuh swee zhwuhrd ryoog-bee" in the feminine and "zhuh swee ryoog-bee-wuh-man" or "zuh swee zhwuhzd ryoog-bee" in French.