Forward in French is "avant."
"Moving forward" can be translated to "avancer" in French.
"Le" means "the" in French, and "slash" refers to the forward slash (/) symbol. So "le SLASH vel" would mean "the vel forward slash" in a mixture of French and English.
"I'm making progress!" is just one English equivalent of the French exclamation J'avance!Specifically, the subject pronoun je* means "I". The present indicative verb avancetranslates as "(I) advance/make progress/move forward, am advancing/making progress/moving forward, do advance/make progress/move forward" among a number of other possibilities depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "zha-vawss" in French.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.
You can say "Je me réjouis à l'idée de faire affaire avec vous" in French.
The homophone of "forward" is "foreword".
"Moving forward" can be translated to "avancer" in French.
Il hâte
looking forward to Friday in the most gentle way I am looking forward to Friday = Je me réjouis d'être vendredi
fais-moi suivre ton courrier
Je suis impatient d'y être
"Le" means "the" in French, and "slash" refers to the forward slash (/) symbol. So "le SLASH vel" would mean "the vel forward slash" in a mixture of French and English.
Je suis impatient. J'attends avec impatience.
j'ai envie de tes baisers
Yes
J'attends le samedi prochain avec impatience.
I believe it's a French/British symbol to kill or to fire.
The French celebrate Christmas during Winter. For Christmas they have the Christmas Eve Feast. The French enjoy their Christmas every year. Everybody look forward to Christmas.