"You" or "You all" are English equivalents of the French word vous.
Specifically, the French word is a personal pronoun. It may be translated as the second person formal singular "you" or the second person formal and informal plural "you all." Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation remains the same: "voo."
It's in French. I don't think that the "Don" is a word in French, but it might be a name. "sont vous" is "are you"
"I will wait for you" in French is "Je vous attendrai", or "Je t'attendrai" if you are speaking to someone you know well.
The French translation for the English word 'yes' is oui. The French translation for the English word 'yes' is oui.
The English translation for the French word "sec" is "dry."
Je suis tombé amoureux / tombée amoureuse de vous means 'I fell in love with you' in French. "tomber en amour" is a word-by-word translation from in English, but isn't correct French.
Nice to meet you is an English equivalent of 'gentil de vous rencontrer'. The words in French are pronounced 'jawn-tee duh voo rawn-kohn-treh'.In the word by word translation, the adjective 'gentil'means 'nice, kind'. The preposition 'de' means 'of'. The personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'. The infinitive 'rencontrer' means 'to meet'. The phrase actually is considered a direct translation of the English 'nice to meet you' into French.
The English word are is a word that always goes with one or more other words. The translation into french depends on what the other words are.I am.... je suisyou (singular) are ....tu eshe is ....il estwe are ....nous sommesyou (plural) are ....vous etesthey are.... ils sontThe words in bold mean 'are'.etes-vous pret means 'are you ready ?'.
Mocha is not a French word.
It means "Do you speak French?" and would be used with an authority, stranger, or more than one person.If you were talking to 1 pet, 1 little kid, or 1 friend/someone you know very well you would say: "parles-tu francais?" (pronounced "parl too fransay?") which means exactly the same thing but has the informal word "tu" meaning "you" instead of the formal/plural "vous" meaning "you".Comprenez-vous??? ("do you understand?")Comprends-tu??? ("do you understand" - informal!!)parlez vous francais means do you speak french?
Translation: seenNote that, far more common are the word "vous" and "vue", pronounced exactly the same as "vu". "Vous" means "you" in the plural or formal sense. "Vue" means "view".
Conjuguer is a French equivalent of the English word "conjugate."Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the infinitive in its present form. The pronunciation will be "koh-zhyoo-ghey" in French.
The French word for 'usually' is: d'habitude