Do you mean "mais oui"? It sounds like meh-WEE, so I'm just guessing that's what you heard...
"Mais oui" means "yes, of course."
Literally, "but yes" - as in, an emphasized affirmative or consent.
That depends on the language. In English nouns have no gender and are neither masculine or feminine. In French it is feminine (la mer) In Spanish it is masculine (el mar) In Welsh it is masculine (y mor)
From Bartleby.com: ETYMOLOGY: Middle English morgage, from Old French : mort, dead (from Vulgar Latin *mortus, from Latin mortuus, past participle of mor, to die; (see mer- in Appendix I) + gage, pledge (of Germanic origin). See the links below.
"To thank a lot" is one English equivalent of the French phrase remercier beaucoup.Specifically, the present infinitive verb remercier means "to give thanks, to thank." The adverb beaucoup translates as "a lot, lots." The pronunciation will be "ruh-mer-syey boh-koo" in French.
Er
The word America has four syllables. (A-mer-i-ca)
Mer, meaning sea in English.
La vie en mer in French means "life at sea" in English.
à la mer means in the sea or at the seaside
The french word is mer, the English translation is sea, and put together phonetically it's merci.
Seaside is "le bord de (la) mer" in French. At the seaside is "au bord de la mer"
"Sea" and "purchase" are English equivalents of the French words mer and acquisition.Specifically, the feminine noun mer means "sea." The feminine noun acquisition means "acquisition, purchase." The respective pronunciations will be "mehr" and "ah-kee-zee-syoh" in French.
french for "sea of names"
The word sea in French is la mer. Try mer, 3 letters.
les tortues de mer
De ta merveilleuse mère is a literal French equivalent of the English phrase "from your wonderful mother." The pronunciation of the feminine singular prepositional phrase will be "duh ta mer-vey-yuhz mer" in French.
'la mer' (fem.) is the sea in French.
This comes from French. "Mer" is "sea" (hence the word mermaid) and "sur" is a preposition, "on" or "above". "Sur-mer" is seaside.