Vive grande
A big penis is "un grand pénis" in French.
Gros (masc.) and grosse (fem.) are adjectives meaning 'big' (in the sense of large, huge) or 'fat' in French.
"slt grand frère" is French, and the direct translation to English is "SLT big brother"... SLT is a French acronym for "Salut", which means hi, or goodbye in English. So the full translation to English would be "Hi/goodbye big brother".
Cajun Pawn Stars - 2012 Joker's Big Score 1-5 was released on: USA: 22 January 2012
Guy's Big Bite - 2006 Kickin' Cajun Alfredo 1-2 was released on: USA: 23 July 2006
If you mean to live in the context of 'I live in a big house' then the infinitive is habiter. If you mean to live in the context of 'I want to live, not die' then the infinitive is vivre
The phrase "big butts are tooting on us" does not have a direct translation in French. Additionally, it is worth mentioning that this phrase may not be appropriate or contextually suitable in French conversation. If you are looking for a different phrase or translation, please provide more context for a better understanding of what you are trying to convey.
The translation of 'big city' in Sanskrit is "mahānagaram" (महानगरम्).
The Lakota translation for "big dog" is "wau tahca."
big
Cajun is a bastardisation of the word Acadian which refers to the French speaking peoples who currently occupy the Atlantic provinces of Canada (especially Nova Scotia and New Brunswick) and parts of the State of Maine. In the mid 1700's the British Crown banished a large proportion of the Acadian population of the Atlantic provinces to the then French colony of Louisiana, confiscating their land and much of their property. Obstensively this was done because the Acadians refused to swear allegiance to the British crown but in reality it was a big property grab. The cajuns currently form a large proportion of the population of South Louisiana and other bordering areas of the Southern States. They still hold on to many archaic French customs including a local french patois which, though it has quite a lot of local idiosyncratic content still follows the basic syntax of 18th century French. The Cajun culture is best known around the world for it's often spicy and strongly flavoured cuisine which is to a large extent based on the native ingredients from the low swampy "bayou" lands of South Louisiana, particularly seafood. Much of the popularity and world wide appeal of Cajun cookery can be traced to the adaptation of basic Cajun home cooking to haute cuisine by the chef Paul Prudhomme. So to make a long story short Cajuns are Americans and Lousinanans but they still have a strong affinity for French culture and for the Acadia of their forefathers.
"The big blue" is an English equivalent of the French phrase le gran bleu.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article lemeans "the." The masculine adjective gran means "big, great." The masculine adjective/noun bleu means "blue."The pronunciation will be "luh graw bluh" in French.