"I'm making progress!" is just one English equivalent of the French exclamation J'avance!
Specifically, the subject pronoun je* means "I". The present indicative verb avancetranslates as "(I) advance/make progress/move forward, am advancing/making progress/moving forward, do advance/make progress/move forward" among a number of other possibilities depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "zha-vawss" in French.
*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.
"I'm making progress!" is just one English equivalent of the French exclamation J'avance!
Specifically, the subject pronoun je* means "I". The present indicative verb avancetranslates as "(I) advance/make progress/move forward, am advancing/making progress/moving forward, do advance/make progress/move forward" among a number of other possibilities depending upon context. The pronunciation will be "zha-vawss" in French.
*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.
The English translation of "siya din" is "also him/her" or "he/she too."
"You dwell...," "You live..." and "You reside" are English equivalents of the incomplete French phrase Tu habites... . Context makes clear which translation suits. The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-beet" 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".
The word "quading" does not have a direct translation in French. However, you can use the phrase "faire du quad" to refer to the activity of riding an all-terrain vehicle.
"Luh plee-azh" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le pliage.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article le means "the". The masculine noun pliagetranslates as "folding". Depending upon context, the phrase will be translated as "folding" or "the folding" since articles do not necessarily survive translation from French into English.
la semaine
One can find the English translation for the French phrase "reduction mammaire" on websites such as babylon translation, google translate, and Free Translation. Once one reaches a website listed here, one can set the appropriate preferences, which in this case is "French to English Translation" and then type in the term or phrase and click the translate button.
OPA français is the phrase for French takeover. This is the translation from English to French.
"C'est la vie" is a common English colloquialism taken from the French phrase to mean, "Such is life". Literal translation: "It's life"
une luge (fem.) is a sledge in French.
it means: my mother.
that's life
It means 'it's mine'.
la belle vie
That's life.
lion of us
Des chausettes propres