Qu'est-ce que mange une vache? in French means "What does a cow eat?" in English.
Mangia! is a literal Italian equivalent of the French word Mange! The verb -- which means "Eat!" in English -- is in the second person informal singular of the present imperative in both cases. The respective pronunciation will be "MAN-dja" in Italian and "mawnzh" in French.
"what is for dinner" is translated casually "qu'est-ce qu'on mange ?", more literally "qu'est-ce qu'il y a pour dîner ?"
Je mange is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I eat." The first person singular subject pronoun and present indicative verb also translate into English as "I'm eating," "I am eating," or "I do eat" according to context. The pronunciation will be "zhuh mawzh" in French.
The English phrase "happy eating" can easily be translated in to French. It becomes the French phrase "heureux de manger".
Mange, Beve, e essere sposato
"Maître" is a French word that starts with "MA," which translates to "master" or "teacher" in English.
"Mange tout" is a French phrase. It means "eat all".
"Anymore" can be translated to French as "plus." For example, "I don't eat seafood anymore" would be "Je ne mange plus de fruits de mer" in French.
The literal translation from French is "you eat".
Mange! in the informal singular and Mangez! in the formal singular and formal/informal plural are French equivalents of the English word "Eat!" The choice depends upon whether the audience is on familial, friendly, or peer terms or on inferior (in age, rank, status) or unfamiliar (as strangers) terms with the speaker. The respective pronunciations will be "mawzh" in the singular and "maw-zhey" in the plural in French.
mange
The verb "to eat" can be translated into the French "manger".