tu as tout dépensé
Une phrase (fem.)
The French phrase "all together" can be translated as "tous ensemble" or "tous ensemble."
Conjuguant tous les verbes is a literal French equivalent of the English phrase "conjugating all of the verbs." The present participial phrase translates literally as "conjugating all the verbs" in French. The pronunciation will be "ko-zhyoo-gaw too ley verb" in French.
France was bankrupt. King Louis and his wife spent it all.
The phrase "les deux" is a phrase that comes from the French language. The French phrase, "les deux" translates from French to English to the phrase "the two".
Because they spent all their money of war products and stuff.
The prepositional phrase is, "For antiques."
'une phrase'
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
'une phrase'
The word "sentence" in French translates to "phrase" or "proposition."
"Me, you" and "me, you all" are English equivalents of the French phrase moi, vous.Specifically, both words function as pronouns. The emphatic pronoun moi means "me." The pronoun vous translates either as the singular "you" or the plural "you all" according to context.The pronunciation will be "mwah voo" in French.