In English, you would not decline a foreign name at all. In English, names are not declined, and English speakers expect foreign names to be constant. So a person with such a name should simply pick one form of the name and stick with it in all English-language discourse.
Quel, quels, quelle, quelles, are the different versions (masculine singular, masculine plural, feminine singular, feminine plural) of the English word 'what'.
When asking for an English translation you must include the name of the language of the original.
Savane is a French equivalent of the English word savannah.Specifically, the French word is a feminine noun. It may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la("the") or the feminine singular indefinite article une ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "sah-vahn" in French.
English translation of bakasyon: vacation
This is mine.It means, "That [singular, masculine noun] is mine." If it were "This is mine," it would be "Ésto es mío." Mío has an accent over the 'i'.
'toi' is 'you' (singular and informal) in French.
Uo (both singular and plural)
small female
Quel, quels, quelle, quelles, are the different versions (masculine singular, masculine plural, feminine singular, feminine plural) of the English word 'what'.
English translation of mo: you
he/she/it wounded. It is a 3rd person singular, perfect tense verb.
When asking for an English translation you must include the name of the language of the original.
"That" is an English equivalent of the French word quel.Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an indefinite adjective. The feminine singular form is quelle. The pronunciation will be "kehl" in French.
Lourd is a French equivalent of the English word "heavy".Specifically, the word is the masculine singular form of an adjective. The pronunciation is "loor". The feminine singular form, lourde, is pronounced "loord".
Magma is the same in English and Italian.Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its singular form. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The pronunciation will be "MAHG-mah" in Italian.
"My" is an English equivalent of the Italian word mio.Specifically, the word is a possessive adjective in its masculine singular form. It is pronounced "MEE-o". The feminine singular form, mia, is pronounced "MEE-a".
In Irish it's "Fáilte" Fáile romhat (singular) Failte romhaibh (plural)