The meaning depends upon the part of speech. For example, the noun 'tout' means the whole. The adverb 'tout' means completely, very. The adjective 'tout' may mean any, every, whole.
Tout is French for everything.
Premièrement or primo (latin)
Tout droit is a masculine, not a feminine, phrase in French. The adverb and masculine singular adjective translate into English as "straight ahead." The pronunciation will be "too dwa" in French.
Est-ce que ce sera tout? - C'est tout?
You can say "Je sais tout" in French, which translates to "I know everything."
it means: everybody
'et tout' is French for 'and all'
tout
The word "you" is not French, so it is not clear what this is meant to mean.
'après tout' means 'after all' in French.
The French phrase 'tout le temps' may mean all the time, the entire time, or the whole time. In the word-by-word translation, the adjective 'tout' means 'entire, whole'. The definite article 'le' means 'the'. And the noun 'temps' means 'time'.
"tout, alors" means 'all, then' in French. The phrase resembles "à tout à l'heure" which means 'see you later'
tout le monde
Tout propre
"pas du tout"
'On s'aimerait tout bas' is French for 'we would whisper'.
That's all !