Le nom complet is a French equivalent of the English phrase "the whole name."
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article le means "the." The masculine noun nom means "name." The masculine adjective complet means "complete, entire, full, whole."
The pronunciation will be "luh noh kohm-pleh" in French.
It depends on some of what. ;-)It could be du, de la, des or quelques. You will probably get a more helpful answer if you ask for a translation of the whole phrase.
That "aucusauntres" is some kind of typo, but if I had to guess the whole phrase I'd say "You're lucky [it ]doesn't smell like any other guys"
"Other" as an adjective and "others" as a noun/pronoun are English equivalents of the French word d'autres.Specifically, the partitive de* means "some." It is a special construction by which French says that only a part of a possible whole is involved. Its meaning may or may not be included in the translation. For example, d'autres literally means "some other" as an adjectival phrase and "some others" as a noun/pronoun phrase.Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "dohtr" in central/northern France and "doh-truh" in southern France.*The vowel e drops - and is replaced by an apostrophe - before an ensuing word which begins with a vowel.
The French phrase 'tout le temps' may mean all the time, the entire time, or the whole time. In the word-by-word translation, the adjective 'tout' means 'entire, whole'. The definite article 'le' means 'the'. And the noun 'temps' means 'time'.
Caleb is the same in English and French.Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun. It originates in the Hebrew name כָּלֵב(Kalev) meaning "faithful, whole-hearted." The pronunciation will be "kah-leb" in French.
'une phrase complète'
well that's french, right? so probably Google french English translator for a little snetence ot two, but if you mean the whole thing, then try a bookstore or french library.
tout le moistout means everymois means month
Tutto il mondo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "the whole world." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "all the world" in English according to context. The pronunciation will be "TOOT-to eel MON-do" in Italian.
The English adjective 'complete' may be translated as complet in the sense of 'whole', total in the sense of 'utter'. It may be translated as acheve in the sense of 'complete, finished'. The English verb 'to complete' may be translated as achever in the sense of 'to complete, finish'; and as completer in the sense of 'to fill in, or make whole'.
Because simply rearranging a few words in a phrase can make the whole thing lose it's sense. Also, many words in English have different (and sometimes vulgar) definitions in other languages.
Complète means full, whole, complete in English.