"Country name" or "country's name" are English equivalents of the French phrase nom du pays.
Specifically, the masculine noun nom is "name". The word du means "of the", from the combination of the preposition de ("of") with the masculine singular definite article le ("the"). The masculine noun pays translates as "country".
The pronunciation will be "noh dyoo pey-ee" in French.
"Her country" and "his country" are English equivalents of the French phrase son pays. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "its country" and "one's country" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "so pay-ee" in Alsatian French.
"The country's name" or "the name of the country" are English equivalents of the French phrase le nom du pays.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article leis "the". The masculine noun nom means "name". The word du means "of the", from the combination of the preposition de ("of") with the article le. The masculine noun pays means "country".The pronunciation will be "luh noh dyoo pey-ee" in French.
"Of the so blue country" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase du pays aussi bleu. The pronunciation of the prepositional phrase -- which also translates literally as "of the blue country too" -- will be "dyoo pa-ee o-see bluh" in French.
The word 'les pays' means countries. In the word-by-word translation, the definite article 'les' means 'the'. And the noun 'pays' means 'countries'. The form of the noun is the same in the singular ['pays'] and in the plural ['pays'].
"Two countries" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase deux pays. The masculine plural phrase also translates as "two areas," "two lands" or "two regions" in the context of a culture within a culture, such as le pays basque ("the Basque country") or le pays cathare ("the Cathar country") within southern France. The pronunciation will be "duh pey-ee" in French.
"The Low Countries" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Les Pays-Bas. The masculine plural proper name most famously references the country known as Holland or Netherlands. The pronunciation will be "ley pa-ee-ba" in French.
"My country, it's..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Mon pays, c'est... . The pronunciation of the masculine singular clause in the third person impersonal singular of the present indicative -- which translates as "It's my country" when the word order is reversed to C'est mon pays -- will be "mo pa-ee sey" in French.
"ton pays" is "your country" in French.
Translation Est-ce que tu aimes mon pays ? If you mean "home country" in the sense of "homeland" or "fatherland", substitute "mon pays" with "ma patrie".
"Hey! What country do you live in?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Hé! Tu vis dans quel pays? The question translates literally as "Hey! You live in what country?" or "Hey! You live in which country?" The pronunciation will be "ey tyoo vee daw kel pey-ee" in French.
"All that she pays" is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Tout ce qu'elle paie. The pronunciation of the dependent clause in the third person feminine singular of the present indicative -- which translates literally as "all that which she does pay/is paying/pays" -- will be "too skel peh" in northerly French and "too suh kel peh" in southerly French.
Dans ton pays means "in your country" in French.