"I'm eleven years old. Goodbye" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "J'ai onze ans. Au revoir."
Specifically, the subject pronoun "je"* means "I." The verb "ai" means "(I) am having, do have, have." The number "onze" means "eleven (11)." The masculine noun "ans" means "years." The word "au" combines the preposition "Ã?" and the masculine singular definite article "le" to mean "till the, until the." The infinitive/masculine noun "revoir" means "to see again, seeing again."
The pronunciation is "zheh ohn-zaw oh-vwahr."
*The vowel "e" drops before a verb that begins with a vowel. The temporary nature of that drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the remaining letter "j" and immediately before the first letter of the following verb.
"Je dix Onze" does not have a clear meaning as it appears to be a combination of French and English words. "Je" means "I" in French, but "dix" means "ten" and "Onze" means "eleven," so the phrase does not make grammatical sense in either language. It is possible that it is a typo or a misspelling.
In French, "eleven" is spelled as "onze." It is a unique term in French and does not follow the same pattern as other numbers. The pronunciation of "onze" is similar to "oh(n)z" in English.
tu as onze ans
onze means eleven in French.
CORRECTED: Salut: cent onze Mille onze
Après onze heures.
"moi jai onze ans" is incorrect French. It seems like you meant to say "j'ai onze ans" which means "I am eleven years old" in English.
j'ai onze ans means 'I am eleven' in English.
"Today is Monday, May 11" in English is Aujourd'hui on est lundi le onze mai in French.
It means "I am eleven years old and I am English" in French.
soixante et onze
deux mille onze