"Count on my long experience!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Croyez en ma vieille expérience! The phrase most famous occurs in the film Le roi et l'oiseau ("The King and the Bird") by French animator Paul Grimault (Mar. 23, 1905-Mar. 29, 1994) and translates literally as "Believe in my ancient experience" in English. The pronunciation will be "kra-ye-zaw ma vyeh-yek-spey-ryaws" in French.
When translated from French to English, "Croyez en ma vieille expérience" means "Believe in my old experience."
"croyez-moi" means "believe me" in French.
Simplement croyez/crois ! or Juste croyez/crois !
croyez-moi
Croyez-vous en amour?
"do believe that each day is the your last"
Le capitale de Maroc est Rabat. Si vous me croyez pas vous pouvez aller sur wikipédia, la reponse est la. ;)The capital city of Maroc is Rabat.
'Croire' is a French equivalent of 'Believe' in the sense of 'to believe'. It's the present form of the infinitive. It's pronounced 'kwahr'.'Crois' is an equivalent in the sense of '[you] believe'. It's the imperative form for the singular, informal 'you' ['tu']. It's pronounced 'kwah''Croyez' is an equivalent in the sense of '[you] believe' also. But it's the imperative form for the plural 'you' ['vous']. It's pronounced 'kwah-yeh'.
Maurice Zundel has written: 'La pierre vivante' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Doctrinal and controversial works 'Allusions' -- subject(s): Truth 'Notre Dame de la Sagesse' 'L' homme existe-t-il?' -- subject(s): Anthropologie philosophique 'Croyez-vous en l'homme?' -- subject(s): Philosophical anthropology 'Our Lady of wisdom'
believe is tranlated by "croire" in French je crois tu crois il croit, elle croit, on croit nous croyons vous croyez ils croient, elles croient
Je tienne Je=I The infinitive of tienne is tenir=to hold. Sometimes it is equivalent to to have or to maintain or to withstand. Tienne is the present subjunctive of this irregular verb. The subjunctive expresses doubt, uncertainty, or a wish, approval or disapproval. Generally the subjunctive is in a subordinate clause. For example: "Croyez- vous qu'il vienne?" Do you think that he will come?
croire (krwahr) - to believe past part. cru (krew) je crois (krwah) tu crois (krwah) il croit (krwah) nous croyons (krwah-yoh[n]) vous croyez (krwah-yay) ils croient (krwah) Note: Careful on the "ils" form, which sounds the same as the singular "il" form. Some people get confused with "boire" and say "ils croivent".