Deja Vu
The French phrase you are looking for is "déjà vu," which translates to "already seen" and is used to describe the feeling of having experienced something before.
"D'où" is a French phrase that means "from where" or "where from." It is used to ask about the origin or source of something.
'tu es française ?' means 'are you French?'
"Nous voulons" in French translates to "we want" in English. It is a phrase used to express a desire or wish for something.
"Zhehm" is the pronunciation of the French phrase J'aime.Specifically, the subject pronoun je means "I." The letter e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel. The verb aime means "(I) am loving, do love, love" in this context.
"Dans sac il y a" in French means "In the bag there is." It is a phrase used to indicate the presence of something inside a bag or container.
"D'où" is a French phrase that means "from where" or "where from." It is used to ask about the origin or source of something.
"Before the rain" is an English equivalent of the French phrase avant la pluie.Specifically, the preposition avant means "before." The feminine singular definite article la means "the." The feminine noun pluie means "rain."The pronunciation is "ah-vaw lah plwee" in French.
The phrase is "sudden insight", and it means when a person suddenly realizes something or understands something that they didn't before.
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
The French phrase mais oui means something like "but of course!" or, literally, "but yes".
The phrase is "sudden insight", and it means when a person suddenly realizes something or understands something that they didn't before.
'la vache' means 'the cow' in French. As an exclamative phrase, it expresses surprise, something along the line of 'holy cow!'
'tu es française ?' means 'are you French?'
"Nous voulons" in French translates to "we want" in English. It is a phrase used to express a desire or wish for something.
The English meaning of the French phrase 'avoir le cafard' is to be feeling down, sad or depressed. In the word-by-word translation, the infinitive 'avoir' means 'to have'. The article 'le' means 'the', and is found before a masculine singular noun. And 'cafard' means ... 'cockroach'!
"I love..." is an English equivalent of the French phrase J'aime... .Specifically, the personal pronoun je* means "I." The verb aime means "(I) am loving, do love, love" in this context. The pronunciation will be "zhehm" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb which begins with a vowel.
"Death of Arthur" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Mort d'Arthur.Specifically, the noun mort means "death." The preposition de* means "of." The pronunciation will be "mohr dahr-tyoor" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a noun which begins with a vowel.