No, in terms of 'qui'. The interrogative/relative pronoun 'qui' means 'who'. It isn't supposed to drop the final 'i'. It nevertheless may be dropped in very rapid, very informal, very colloquial, very casual spoken French. Yes, in terms of 'que'. The interrogative/relative pronuon 'que' means 'that, which'. Its final 'e' is dropped in front of a word that begins with a vowel or an unaspirated 'h'.
"qui est-ce qui ..." or "qu'est-ce que..." are correct in French. - qui est-ce qui a pris la monnaie ? (who did take the spare change?) - qu'est-ce que c'est ? (what is it?) (extremely frequent) "Qui est-ce que ..." may be correct, but quite rare (ex: qui est-ce que voilà ?)
qui est-ce que t'appelles ? qui est-ce que vous appelez ?
In french, who is translates to qui est.
No. I know of no word "qui" in Spanish. Que can mean several things, dependng on context, and whether it has an accent. Generally, que means: which; than; as; that; who; whom. Qué generally means: What? or which? as an interrogative.
"ce qui sera sera" or "que sera sera" "sera" is the 3rd person future tense of to be, "he/she/it will be" and the subject is "what" which is "ce qui" or "que"
Qu'est ce que ... means 'what is ... / what does ..." in English. That is used to form questions: qu'est que c'est ? (what is that?) - qu'est-ce que tu fais ? (what are you doing?) quoi means 'what' and qui means 'who'. These words are used in French in the same way than you use their English equivalents. Ex: Je ne sais pas quoi faire > I don't know what to do; C'est elle qui a cassé le verre > It was she who broke the glass.
"Ce qui" is used before a subject or a verb, while "ce que" is used before an object. For example, "ce qui me plaît, c'est la musique" (what I like is music) uses "ce qui" because it stands for the subject "la musique." On the other hand, "ce que j'aime, c'est la tranquillité" (what I like is tranquility) uses "ce que" because it replaces the object of the verb "j'aime." To describe their friends using "ce qui," someone could say "ce qui est important pour moi, ce sont les amis sincères" (what is important to me are sincere friends). To use "ce que," they could say "ce que j'apprécie chez mes amis, c'est leur sens de l'humour" (what I appreciate about my friends is their sense of humor).
It means: if I am the one that searches for "qui" I am. (Qui is not a spanish word).
Qui. Etou
Qui est que votre image
"Qu'est-ce qui" is used to ask about the subject of the sentence (what/who is), while "qu'est-ce que" is used to ask about the object of the sentence (what/who do/does). For example, "Qu'est-ce qui se passe?" (What is happening?) and "Qu'est-ce que tu manges?" (What are you eating?)
It means- 'Love me for who I am, not for what you want me to be'