"I'm 15 (years old) and you?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase J'ai quinze et toi?
Specifically, the subject pronoun je* is "I". The present indicative verb ai means "(I) am having, do have, have". The number quinze means "fifteen (15)". The conjunction et means "and". The personal pronoun toi translates as "(informal singular) you".
The pronunciation will be "zheh keh-zey twa" in French.
*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.
Quinze means 'fifteen' in English.
Quinze
95
15 minus...
Elle a quinze ans is a French equivalent of the English phrases "She is 15 years old" and "She's 15 years old." The statement translates literally as "She has 15 years." The pronunciation will be "eh-la kehn-zaw" in French.
95 in French is "quatre-vingt-quinze," which translates to "four-twenty-fifteen" in English.
English: ninety-five French: quatre-vingt quinze
English: fifteen Catalan: quinze French: quinze Italian: quindici Spanish: quince
Fifteen is "quinze" in French.
The number 15 in French is "quinze."
Quinze means 'fifteen' in English.
J'ai quinze ans. Direct translation: I have 15 years. (I'm 15.)
quinze mille
Trois cent quinze and Trois heures quinze are French equivalents of the English number "315." Context makes clear whether number (case 1) or time (example 2) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "twa saw kehz" and "twa-zur kehz" in French.
mille neuf cent quinze (or: dix neuf cent quinze)
quinze
Quinze