In Parisian French, one would say:
"Je ne sais pas"
I don't really know about Cajun French, but I believe they would drop the "ne" article in order to get:
"Je sais pas" pronounced as [jeuh seh pa] I think
Cajun is not a language, but the language they do speak is French. Although I do not know Cajun slang, go ahead and say the fancy "Bon anniversaire".
Ain p'tit brin (a little bit)
To say "it is good" in Cajun French, you can say "c'est bon."
Sur le temps.
In Cajun French, you would say "la fête" to mean party.
Cajun is not a language, but the language they do speak is French. Although I do not know Cajun slang, go ahead and say the fancy "Bon anniversaire".
Ain p'tit brin (a little bit)
To say "it is good" in Cajun French, you can say "c'est bon."
Sur le temps.
In Cajun French, you would say "la fête" to mean party.
In Cajun French, you would say "Sava?" to ask "How are you?"
In Cajun French, "cousin" is spelled and pronounced the same as in English.
In Cajun French, you would say "À la prochaine" or "Adieu" to say Goodbye.
Como Ce Vas? It means " hello, how are you"?
You can say "Je t'aimerai à l'infini" in Cajun French to express "I will love you infinitely".
To say "going home" in Cajun French, you can say "aller chez nous".
In Cajun French, you can say "cher(e)" or "mon cher" to mean sweetheart.