"I am your life" or "I follow your life" may be English equivalents of the French phrase Je suis ta vie.
Specifically, the pronoun je means "I." The verb suis means "(I) am" if it is the first person singular of the present indicative of the infinitive être. It means "(I) am following, do follow, follow" if it is the first person singular of the present indicative of the infinitive suivre. The feminine possessive adjective ta means "(informal singular) your." The feminine noun vie means "life."
The pronunciation is "zhuh swee tah vee."
"C'est la vie" is a common English colloquialism taken from the French phrase to mean, "Such is life". Literal translation: "It's life"
La vie in French means "the life" in English.
your life = ta vie/votre vie ("Votre" is the polite form of "you", in French)
Bonne vie in French means "good life" in English.
life
life-vie
"C'est la vie" is a common English colloquialism taken from the French phrase to mean, "Such is life". Literal translation: "It's life"
la belle vie
That's life.
"le temps de votre vie" is "the time of your life", but it looks like a literal translation from English, it is not something a French would say.
La vie in French means "the life" in English.
your life = ta vie/votre vie ("Votre" is the polite form of "you", in French)
Bonne vie in French means "good life" in English.
life
"Vie pour ta faveur" is the translation of "vie for your favor" in French.
Translation: Je t'aimerai toujours pour tout la vie. Note: It is as redundant in French as it is in English.
alive: en vie to be alive : être en vie