Et je te donnerais le monde is a literal French equivalent of the English phrase "And I would give you the world." The pronunciation will be "ey zhuh tuh duh-nreh luh mohnd" in French.
"Would also" in English is également in French.
Translated from English to French, stage would be "etape".
j'aimerais ... , j'aimerais beaucoup ...
I would love that is "j'aimerais / j'aimerais ça" or "ça me plairait" in French.
"she speaks English" is translated "elle parle français" in French.
It is a little confusing as to what you are asking.If you are asking for the French equivalent of the English word "son", it would "fils" (fee-s).If you are asking for the English equivalent of the French word "son", it would "his/her/its".
The French equivalent of the English word, we, is: nous.So, to say, we are, you would say, nous sommes.
je voudrais ... = I'd want... tu voudrais ... = you'd want ... il, elle voudrait ... = he, she would want ...
Names don't get translated. You say it Kenny as you would in English.
This is a translation of 'you mean the world to me'. A French speaker would not speak that way, he would say 'tu es tout pour moi'.
"Him and them" is an English equivalent of the French phrase lui et leur. The masculine phrase also translates incompletely into English as "him and their... ." The pronunciation will be "lwee ey luhr" in French.
Stewie Griffin would be spelled as "Stewie Griffin" in French, as names are typically not translated.