Chez gros Pierrot and de gros Pierrot are literal French equivalents of the English phrase "fat Pete's." The respective pronunciations of the masculine singular prepositional phrases -- which respectively mean "at fat Pete's (business, home)" and "of (or belonging to) fat Pete" -- will be "shey gro pyeh-ro" and "duh gro pyeh-rot" in French.
The English word "fatty" translates to French as "gras", which translates back to English as "bold". However, the word "fat" in English can be translated to "graisse" in French(and then translated back to English as "fat" again. I don't actually know French, I used an online translator for this. Maybe a French person could give you a better answer. If you mean a person - gros(se), obèse, if you mean food etc - gras(se) - the fat content in food is called - matière grasse.
Grosse bise is a French equivalent of the English phrase "big kiss." The feminine singular adjective and noun also translate into English as "fat kiss." The pronunciation will be "grohs beez" in French.
"Fat Girl" in English means ragazza grassa in Italian.
Grassi in Italian means "fat" in English.
Grassa in Italian means "fat" in English.
in french it may mean "tweety bird" from a translated version of a TV series called (in french) titi et gros minet, meaning "tweety bird and fat cat"
Futotte iru.
Mardi=Tuesday Gras=Fat Both are french words that when translated to english from Mardi Gras means Fat Tuesday.
debu buta
Anata WA debu.
"The tree is big" is an English equivalent of the French phrase L'arbre est gros. The declarative statement also translates as "The tree is large (fat)" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "lar-brey gro" in northerly French and "lar-bruh ey gro" in southerly French.
Gordo for a male, gorda for a female.