"Tu t'appelles" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Your name is... ."
Specifically, the subject pronoun "tu" means "you." The reflexive pronoun "te" means "yourself." The verb "appelles" means "(singular informal You) are called, call, do call."
The pronunciation is "tyoo tah-pehl."
Il s'appelle... is a French equivalent of the incomplete English phrase "His name is... ." The declarative phrase translates literally as "He calls (names) himself..." in English. The pronunciation will be "eel sa-pel" in French.
"Your name is... ." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Tu t'appelles... . The phrase translates literally as "You call yourself..." or "You name yourself..." in English. The pronunciation will be "tyoo ta-pel" in French.
"Her name is..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Elle s'appelle... . The phrase translates literally as "She calls herself" or "She names herself" in English. The pronunciation will be "el sa-pel" in French.
"Pseudonym" is an English equivalent of the French phrase nom de guerre. The prepositional phrase translates literally as "name of war" in English. The pronunciation will be "no duh gher" in French.
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
"His name is..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Il s'appelle... . The phrase translates literally as "He calls himself" or "He names himself" in English. The pronunciation will be "eel sa-pel" in French.
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".
"At Brittny's (place)" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Chez Brittny.Specifically, the preposition chez means "at (the house or place of)" in this context. The name Brittny is an English loan name and a feminine proper noun. The pronunciation will be "shey breet-nee" in French.
The French phrase "je m'appelle" translates to "my name is" in English. It is commonly used as an introduction to provide one's name in a conversation or when meeting someone for the first time.
It is french it means "my name is..."
"Je m'appelle Francisco."
"My name is..." is a literal English equivalent of the English-influenced, incomplete, uncommon French phrase Mon nom est... . The pronunciation will be "mo no ey" in French.