raconteur plus de moi meme
Je m'appelle Jimmy. Je m'apelle literally translates to "I call myself," but that is how the French give their names to others.
You say hippopotame. go to www.wordreference.com for more translating
Translation: Aujourd'hui, je voudrais parler de moi-même. Just to note, it sounds a little egocentric in French. (I.e. I want to talk about myself instead of you.)
The literal, word-for-word translation would be "Mon nom est Peter et son nom est David." However, it would be more common in French to say "Je m'appelle Peter et il s'appelle David," which literally translates to "I call myself Peter and he calls himself David."
It is correct to say "an individual and me" in this case. "Myself" should be used reflexively (e.g. I did it myself) or for emphasis (e.g. I will do it myself), not as a regular pronoun alongside another noun or pronoun.
"Je m'amuse"
You can say 'Je m'aime'.
I love myself: je m'aime I love you : je t'aime
it is " Je me suis amusé."Try the link below if you need any more translations
myself is translated "moi-même" in French.
je dois me renseigner
Je me suicide. (I am killing myself.) Je me suiciderai. (I am going to kill myself.) Je me tue. (I am killing myself [literal].) Je me tuerai. (I am going to kill myself [literal].)
myself is 'moi-même' in French.
To say the words more touch in the French language you say plus tactile.
Je m'appelle Pratik. Which literally translates to I call myself Pratik, but that's how you'd say it
Je m'appelle Jimmy. Je m'apelle literally translates to "I call myself," but that is how the French give their names to others.
'more about me' in french is 'plus sur moi'