What, I don't understand? The correct spelling is 'quoi ? (or better : comment ?) je ne comprends pas.'
Je ne sais pas à quoi (ça sert) - I don't know what (it's for)
"Je ne sais pas de quoi tu parles" (or 'de quoi vous parlez' to be more polite)
"I don't know what to say"
it means "I do not know what to say or think"
Je m'excuse pour la confusion, mais je peux communiquer en français. Comment puis-je vous aider aujourd'hui?
Je ne sais pas à quoi (ça sert) - I don't know what (it's for)
"Je ne sais pas de quoi tu parles" (or 'de quoi vous parlez' to be more polite)
'je ne sais pas quoi faire'
"I don't know what to say"
je ne sais pas quoi dire
"Je ne sais pas quoi faire" But then again it depends on the sentence you use this phrase in.
it means "I do not know what to say or think"
"Je ne sais pas quoi sans toi" means "I don't know what without you". "J'ai vraiment besoin de toi à mes côtés" is "I really need you by my side".
The commonest answers to 'merci beaucoup' in French are: - pas de quoi / il n'y a pas de quoi (no problem, that's nothing) - de rien (that's nothing) - je vous en prie (you're welcome).
The meaning of the observation 'Je nais, c'est quoi [alors]?' is I'm born, so what? In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronuon 'je' means 'I'. The verb 'nais' means '[I] am born'. The demonstrative pronoun 'ce'* means 'this'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The pronoun 'quoi' means 'what'. *The letter 'e' drops in front of a word that begins with a vowel or unaspirated 'h'.
In French, it literally means "I know not what". The French idiom can best be translated as "a certain something." It's used to indicate qualities that are intangible, and hard to put into words.Example: "He did well with the ladies, as he had a certain je ne sais quoi."The French pronunciation is (zhuh nuh say kwah) - ZH sound (JH) is the G in genre.The US pronunciation sounds like (jen nay say quah).
"Je n'ai pas de trousse" translates to "I do not have a pencil case". "Je n'ai pas" meaning "I do not have" and "de trousse" being a pencil case.