Douce or doux in the singular and douces or doux in plural are French equivalents of the English word "sweet." Context makes clear whether feminine (cases 1, 3) or masculine (examples 2, 4) genders suit. The respective pronunciations will be "doos" in the feminine and "doo" in the masculine in French.
"Sweet pea" in English is pois de senteur in French.
The feminine adjective douce in French means "soft" or "sweet" in English.
Garçon doux in French means "sweet boy" in English. This is never used in French.
"Sweet dreams!" in English means Fais de beaux rêves!("Make beautiful dreams!") or Pas de cauchemars! ("No nightmares!") in French.
It is doux in the masculine, douce in the feminine, for things that are naturally sweet. Artificially sweet is sucré(e) "sugared."
Bonbon is a food which means "correct" when translated from French to English. The masculine singular noun translates as "correct-correct" or "good-good" and "candy" or "sweet" conversationally in English. The pronunciation will be "bo-bo" in French.
My name translated from English to french is Allen
Douces gouttes is a French equivalent of the English phrase "sweet drams." The feminine plural phrase also translates as "sweet beads (drops, spots)" and "sweet little bits (of whisky or in fact of anything)" in English. The pronunciation will be "doo-sgoot" in French.If you meant to ask about "sweet dreams" Belle rêves is the French equivalent of this expression.
Bref et concis is a French equivalent of the English phrase "short and sweet." The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "brief and concise" in English. The pronunciation will be "breh-fey ko-see" in French.
"Immediately!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tout de suite! The adverbial phrase also translates as "Right now!" or "Straightaway!" in English. The pronunciation will be "too sweet" in northerly French and "too duh sweet" in southerly French.
"You are beautiful. I am hugging you, my sweet."
Sweet and salty