Improper French for: I am going to eat you, kiss you, and make love with you forever.
If you are planning that level of intimacy, you would not use the "vous" form of you; it would be: Je vais te manger, t'embrasser et faire l'amour avec toi pour toujours. But not really a correct usage.
The surname Bingham is English in origin. It denoted people from an old English village of the same name, now located in Nottinghamshire. Etymologically it comes from the Norse word "bingr" meaning "byre/manger" and the Olde English "ham" meaning "homestead/farm".
== == I am going to eat.
manger dehors
Neil Smith.
This happened in the 1200s. Many people mistakenly believe that a manger is a building. The manger is not a building, the manger is the little bed-like thing that baby Jesus was placed in. It was used to feed hay to animals. Jesus was placed in one of this, in a place where animals were kept. The depiction of the Magi has also changed over time, both in the race of the individual kings and their mode of transport. In the middle ages, they were also depicted as arriving on horses. Nowadays, they arrive on camels.
La salle à manger is "the dining room" in English.
"Eating" in English is manger ("to eat") in French.
To eat
ANSWER: to eat - manger
The verb "to eat" can be translated into the French "manger".
the dog has not eaten
The English words "manger" and "stable" both ultimately come from Latin. "Manger" comes from the Latin word "mangarium," which means "eating place for animals." "Stable" comes from the Latin word "stabulum," which means "shelter for domestic animals."
I could eat you. Hmmm.....
I like to eat pasta.
The English manager in 1966 was Ralf Ramsey.
There is no such word in English - you may mean mauger, mawger or meager or manger
"Does she love to eat?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Aime-t-elle manger? The question also translates as "Does she love eating?" and "Does she like eating?" in English. The pronunciation will be "em-tel mawn-zhey" in French.