"And to do" or "and to make" may be English equivalents of the French phrase et faire.
Specifically, the conjunction et means "and." The infinitive faire means "to do, to make." The pronunciation will be "et fehr" in French.
"To know how to do" is one English equivalent of the French phrase savoir faire.Specifically, the infinitive savoir means "to know, to know how." The infinitive faire means "to do, to make." The pronunciation will be "sah-vwahr fehr" in French.
"To make the bed" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Faire le lit.Specifically, the present infinitive faire is "to do, to make". The masculine singular definite article le means "the". The masculine noun littranslates as "bed".The pronunciation will be "fer luh lee" in French.
"To deflect it" is one English equivalent of the French phrase le faire dévier.Specifically, the personal pronoun le is "he, it". The present infinitive faire means "to do, to make". The present infinitive dévier translates as "to deflect, to deviate, to sidetrack".The pronunciation will be "luh fehr dey-vyey" in French.
"How to do the reformulation" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Comment faire le rephrasing.Specifically, the adverb comment is "how". The present infinitive faire means "to do, to make". The masculine singular definite article le means "the". The masculine noun rephrasingtranslates as "reformulation".The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw fehr luh ruh-frah-zeeng" in French.
Faire la fête is a French equivalent of the English phrase "to party." The phrase translates literally as "to do a feast" or "to make one party" in English. The pronunciation will be "fer la fet" in French.
"Let (them) do (as they wish)!" is one English equivalent of the French present imperative phrase Laissez faire! The pronunciation will be "leh-sey fer" in French.
The French phrase, "Faire des tonnes" translates into English as "to pile it on" or to "to lay it on thick." The phrase is used when someone is exaggerating something.
Faire is a French equivalent of the English phrase "to make." The present infinitive also translates literally as "to do" in English. The pronunciation will be "fer" in northerly French and "feh-ruh" in southerly French.
Faire in French is "to do" in English.
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.
The direct translation from English to French of the nounshopping (synonym: purchasing) is courses.If you want to use the term in a phrase, the two most useful are faire les courses (to do the shopping) and aller faire les courses (to go shopping).
"What are we going to do?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce qu'on va faire? The question translates literally as "What is this that one is going to do?" in English. The pronunciation will be "keh-sko va fer" in French.