"My birthday is on the 7th of June" in English is Mon anniversaire est le 7 juin or Ma fête est le 7 juin in French.
"Sino hasta junio como ves" translated to English means "But until June, how do you see it?"
"The months of the year" in English is les mois de l'année in French: janvier, février, mars, avril, mai, juin, juillet, août, septembre, octobre, novembre, décembre.
It means "My mother's birthday is the first of June."
June 19, 1861
To say the tenth of June in French, you would say "le dix juin."
My birthday is on June the 15th is "mon anniversaire est le quinze juin" in French.
"Sino hasta junio como ves" translated to English means "But until June, how do you see it?"
"The rose" is an English equivalent of the French feminine singular phrase la rose. The two words merged together into a forename most famously occur in the novel LaRose by (Karen) Louise Erdrich (born June 7, 1954 in Little Falls, Minnesota) in 2016. The pronunciation will be "la-roz" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"The eternal child" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase l'enfant éternel. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase -- which links perhaps most famously with the same-named novel by Paris-born French author and essayist Philippe Forest (born June 18, 1962) -- will be "ey-ter-neh-law-faw" in French.
It is 'rokugatsu.' (Japanese: 六月, or simply 6月)
Giugno is an Italian equivalent of the English name "June." The masculine singular noun references the sixth month in the Italian calendar. The pronunciation will be "DJOO-nyo" in Italian.
Mon anniversaire est le premier juin.
Mon anniversaire est le 07 juin.
"The months of the year" in English is les mois de l'année in French: janvier, février, mars, avril, mai, juin, juillet, août, septembre, octobre, novembre, décembre.
Mon anniversaire est le quinze juin.
It means "My mother's birthday is the first of June."
"Full (set of reed stops of the) organ and duet (registrations)" is an English equivalent of the French phrase grand jeu et duo. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase - which most famously links with composer, harpsichordist, and organist Louis-Claude Daquin (July 4, 1694 - June 15, 1772) - will be "graw zhuh ey dyoo-o" in French.