"Ça sent mauvais" or the stronger "Ça pue" are French equivalents of the English phrase "Smells terrible."
Specifically, the demonstrative pronoun "Ça" means "it, that." The verb "sent" means "(He/she/it) does smell, is smelling, smells." The masculine adjective/adverb "mauvais" means "bad." The verb "pue" means "(He/she/it) does stink, is stinking, stinks."
The respective pronunciations are "sah saw moh-veh" and "sah pyoo."
there are no direct words that translate to "house of horrors" however the combination of words that would most closely resemble "house of horrors" in French translate into English as "I hate the United States" . By the way, the English phrase "smells like sh_t" sounds like the French phrase that, translated into English, means "I am a Frenchman".
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
The phrase "les deux" is a phrase that comes from the French language. The French phrase, "les deux" translates from French to English to the phrase "the two".
"Only" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ne...que. The adverbial phrase translates literally as "not...that" in English. The pronunciation will be "nuh kuh" in French.
"He is..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Il est... . The phrase also translates literally as "It is..." in English. The pronunciation will be "ee-ley" in French.
"We are... ." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Nous sommes... . The phrase also translates literally as "We're..." in English. The pronunciation will be "noo suhm" in French.
Le fils is a French equivalent of the English phrase "the son." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "the boy" in English. The pronunciation will be luh fees" in French.
"Wow!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "oh-là -là ."Specifically, the French phrase is an exclamation of surprise. The pronunciation is "oh-lah-lah."
The French equivalent of the English phrase, to have, is: avoir.
"Your hatred" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ta haine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "ta enn" in French.
"The child" is an English equivalent of the French phrase l'enfant. The masculine singular phrase may be found translated into English without "the" since French uses the definite article where English does and does not. The pronunciation will be "law-faw" in French.
"Of whom" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase de qui. The prepositional phrase also translates as "whose" in English. The pronunciation will be "duh kee" in French.