"I have a pink sack (bag, purse)" and "I have one pink sack (bag, purse)" are literal English equivalents of the French phrase J'ai un sac rose. Regardless of the meaning, the pronunciation remains "zheh eh sa-kroz" in French.
The sound "jai" in French may mean "I have" (J'ai), the "jay" bird (geai), or the "jet" stone (jais).
"moi jai onze ans" is incorrect French. It seems like you meant to say "j'ai onze ans" which means "I am eleven years old" in English.
I depends of the contet but most of time J'ai means I have
You would say "J'ai péter" in French.
Jai Te Aime is in French. The spelling is off, its "je t'aime", it's French and it means "i love you." To simply say "I like you" you would say "je t'aime bien."
Jai is not an English word. It can't be translated into Hebrew.
"finish" from English to French: fini to say " I am finished" in French it is: jai fini
"J'ai -------- ans." literally means: I have -------- years. It's interpreted as: I'm -------- years old.
The sound "jai" in French may mean "I have" (J'ai), the "jay" bird (geai), or the "jet" stone (jais).
jai
"moi jai onze ans" is incorrect French. It seems like you meant to say "j'ai onze ans" which means "I am eleven years old" in English.
I depends of the contet but most of time J'ai means I have
that means nothing in French.
You would say "J'ai péter" in French.
I have three mice
j'ai joué au foot means 'I played football' in French (understand 'soccer' if you live in the US)
oui jai is "young writing" or "easy writing" have to be "oui j'ai" yes I have, ye I gat