It means 'What does Pascal say ?'
Where do you also speak in French? I think it means, "Or is it that you are speaking in French too".
How can I get there?
Perhaps it was me
plus beau que je ne peux dire (this is the correct word order in the phrase) means 'more beautiful than I could tell in French.
Qu'est-ce que tu vas chercher? in French means "What are you going to look for?" in English.
Nothing. I think you didn't understand the phrase.
I believe in French and English, it means: "What will be, will be"
Que c'est is French for the phrase, "What is it?". This is actually a modified version of the French phrase, "Que est ce que ce est" meaning "What is it that it is?"
"parce que" is a French colocation meaning "because".
"Only" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ne...que. The adverbial phrase translates literally as "not...that" in English. The pronunciation will be "nuh kuh" in French.
"Qu'hier que demain" is not a standard phrase in French. It does not have a clear meaning and seems to be a combination of words that does not form a coherent sentence.
Formal: "Qu'est-ce que cela signifie ?"Neutral: "Qu'est-ce que ça veut dire ?"Colloquial: "Ça veut dire quoi ?"
"Est-ce que" is a question form; that means roughly "is it?". The affirmative phrase "c'est" means "it is".
Where do you also speak in French? I think it means, "Or is it that you are speaking in French too".
"parce que" or "car" mean because in French.
'... que tu aimes is '... that you like' in French.
"That you be" and "That you may be" are English equivalents of the French phrase Que tu sois. The pronunciation of the present subjunctive phrase in the second person informal singular will be "kuh tyoo swa" in French.