moi-même
myself is 'moi-même' in French.
The phrase means, my name is. Literally it means "I call myself."
No let me write the introduction in English and you translate it to french language
Je m'appelle Jimmy. Je m'apelle literally translates to "I call myself," but that is how the French give their names to others.
Je m'appelle followed by the first name or the complete is the way to answer the French question Comment vous appelez-vous? The question means "How do you call yourself? or "How do you name yourself?" literally and "What is your name?" loosely, and the answer translates literally as "I call myself" or "I name myself" and loosely as "My name is" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw voo-za-pley-voo" for the question and "zhuh ma-pel" for the answer in French.
Je m'appelle Jonathan. (I call myself Johnathan.) Mon nom est Jonathan. (My name is Jonathan.)
It literally means "I call myself" but usually translated as "my name is..." Je m'appelle George becomes My name is George.
Moi-même
je
Salut, je m'appelle Carina is a French equivalent of 'Hello. My name is Carina'. The words in French are pronounced 'sah-loo, zhuh mah-pehl kah-ree-nah'.In the word by word translation, the interjection 'salut'means 'greetings, hello, hi, salutations'. The subject pronoun 'je' means 'I'. The reflexive 'me' means 'myself'. The verb 'appelle' means '[I] am called or named, do call or name myself'.
Je m'appelle Pratik. Which literally translates to I call myself Pratik, but that's how you'd say it
par moi-même