it's the same - une pause
temps de pause
"La pause" in French translates to "the break" or "the pause" in English. It refers to a temporary halt or interruption in an activity, often used in contexts like taking a break during work or a pause in a conversation. The term can also be applied to various situations where a moment of respite is needed.
occupé is how you say engaged in French
Mal is how you say badly in French.
extatique is how you say ecstatic in french
You can say "une pause cigarette" in French.
"to take a break" may be translated as "faire une pause" in French.
Pause
The rest (remainder) of the day is "le reste de la journée" in French. The rest (pause, restful moment) is "le repos".
The more polite version is Prenez une pause de quinze minutes. The more casual version is Prends une pause de quinze minutes.
pause-santé
temps de pause
"La pause" in French translates to "the break" or "the pause" in English. It refers to a temporary halt or interruption in an activity, often used in contexts like taking a break during work or a pause in a conversation. The term can also be applied to various situations where a moment of respite is needed.
There are three. Ba (pause), lo (pause), ney (pause). Say the word slowly and listen to where the word breaks.
In Japanese you would say "クリケット バット" [(Kuriketto batto)Koo-rih-keh-t(pause)to bah-t(pause)to"
you say: "deja de hacer eso"
First = Say Toy Second = Say Lit Third = Say them together without a pause It's spelt toilet.