"Nous allons acheter..." is a French equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "We're going to buy... ."
Specifically, the subject pronoun "nous" means "we." The verb "allons" means "(We) are buying, buy, do buy." The infinitive "acheter" means "to buy."
The pronunciation is "noo-zah-loh-za-shteh."
"I'm buying!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'achète!Specifically, the personal pronoun je* means "I". The verb achète translates as "(I) am buying, buy, do buy". The pronunciation will be "zah-sheht" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel.
Nous allons acheter... . and On va acheter... .are French equivalents of the incomplete English phrase "We are going to buy... ." The first-mentioned example is more standard in impact whereas the second conveys a more colloquial, conversational, informal tone. The respective pronunciation will be "noo-za-lo-zash-tey" and "o vash-tey" in northerly French and "noo-sa-lo-za-shuh-tey" and "o va-shuh-tey" in southerly French.
"What can you buy?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce que vous pouvez acheter? The question translates literally into English as "What is this that you are able to buy?" The pronunciaiton will be "keh-skuh voo poo-vey-zash-tey" in French.
"You're paying" is one English equivalent of the French phrase Tu achètes.Specifically, the subject pronoun tu means "(informal singular) you." The present indicative verb achètes translates as "(informal singular you) are buying/paying/purchasing, buy/pay/purchase, do buy/pay/purchase." The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-sheht" in French.
Puis-je acheter des coquilles? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "May I buy shells?" The interrogative statement translates literally as "May (can) I buy some shells?" since French requires the partitive des where English does and does not "some" when referencing not getting all of a huge amount of something. The pronunciation will be "pwee-zhash-tey dey ko-kee" in French.
"We're going to buy some books" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Nous allons acheter des livres. The pronunciation will be "noo-za-lo-zash-tey dey leev" in northerly French. It will be "noo-za-lo-za-shu-tey dey lee-vruh" in southerly French.
"We're going to buy stamps" is an English equivalent of the French phrase On y va pour acheter des timbres. The declarative statement in the third person singular of the present indicative translates literally into English as "One goes there in order to buy some stamps." The pronunciation will be "o-nee va pooh-rash-tey dey tehmb" in northerly French and "o-nee va pooh-ra-shuh-tey dey tehm-bruh" in southerly French.
The phrase "comprar casa" is a phrase that has origins from Spain. When translated, the phrase "comprar casa" in Spanish means, "buy house" in English.
The phrase 'I would like to buy this' when translated to Indonesian is Saya ingin membeli ini.
vous allez acheter
I assume any medium-sized or large bookshop will offer a variety of French-English dictionaries.
Tom and I are... Because you and tom are plural