"Do you speak allemand?" is a mixed English and French equivalent of the mixed French and English phrase Parlez-vous German? The question may be heard asked by tourists in French and German-speaking regions of Germany, Luxembourg and Switzerland. The pronunciation will be "par-ley-voo al-maw" in northerly French and "par-ley-voo a-luh-maw" in southerly French.
"Hi!" in English is Sali! or Salut! in French, Hallo! or Tschau! in German, Ciao! in Italian and Allegra! in Romansh.
Pommes frittes is the translation in German. It is translated from English to German. German is mostly spoken in the European countries.
The translation of the German word "Kompass" to English is "compass". Translated to French, it is "boussole", to Spanish, it is "brujula with inflection on the "u". Translated to Italian it is "bossola" and translated to Latin it is "cicumdabit"
Charlot is a French equivalent of the English name "Charlie." The pronunciation of the diminutive for the masculine proper noun Charles (pronounced "sharl" in French and translated as "Charles") -- which originates in the German name Karl ("male," "man") -- will be "shar-lo" in French.
"German" in English is tedesco in Italian.
Mémé is a French equivalent of the German word Oma. The two feminine singular words translate as "gran," "grandma" or "granny" in English. The respective pronunciations will be "mey-mey" in French and "O-ma" in German.
Della in German is "bright" or "noble" in English.
"la boue" (fem.) is the mud in French. "Boche" is an old deprecatory term meaning "German".
Nein
Fröhliche Weihnachten or Frohe Weihnachten. in French you mean. Joyeux Noël.
"German word translated to English" becomes "Deutsches Wort übersetzt ins Englisch"
The German word for friend id Freund; all nouns are capitalized in German. The languages spoken in Switzerland are French, German, Italian, and Romansch.