"I adore love, and I want your revenge" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase "J'adore l'amour Et je veux ta revanche."
Specifically, the personal pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "adore" means "(I) adore, am adoring, do adore." The words "l'amour" mean "the love." The conjunction "et" means "and." The verb "veux" means "(I) am wishing/wanting, do wish/want, wish/want." The feminine possessive adjective "ta" means "(informal singular) your." The feminine noun "revanche" means "revenge."
The pronunciation is "zhah-dohr lah-moo-reh zhuh vuh tah reh-vawnsh."
I adore Love, I love Love
Chez Lamour means "At Love's"
Love
A writer's work is never totally unique but is dependent on the books that he/she has read and the education that she/he has received. The Dialogues of Plato are heavily influenced by Socrates. The Stories of Louise Lamour owe a Lot to Zane Grey. And any one writer is of course influence by more than any single source. Many writer's style or what-not can be attributed to a considerable number of others, sort of like a genealogy of predecessors. Which is why we call it a literary heritage.
"j'adore l'amour et je veux ta revanche" means 'I adore Love and I want your revenge' in French.
I adore Love, I love Love
Chez Lamour means "At Love's"
Love
L'amour is the French word for love - Lamour is also a family name
No. He doesn't. he's a wild french skunk just looking for lamour
Marguerite Lamour was born in 1956.
Charlese LaMour is 178 cm.
Dorothy Lamour is 5' 5".
Lexi Lamour is 5' 8".
Dorothy Lamour was born on December 10, 1914.
Pascal Lamour was born on 1958-10-28.