The French phrase "Que sais-je" is pronounced as "kuh sayzh" in English phonetics. The "que" is pronounced with a soft "k" sound, the "sais" is pronounced as "sayz" with a silent "j", and the "je" is pronounced as "zh" similar to the "s" in "measure." The stress in the pronunciation falls on the second syllable, "sais."
"Than" in French is spelled "que."
The pronunciation of the French word "partageuse" is /paʁ.ta.ʒøz/.
"parce que" or "car" mean because in French.
"Ee-ley taw kuh zhuh pahrt" is the pronunciation of the French phrase Il est temps que je parte.Specifically, the masculine pronoun il means "he, it." The verb est means "(he/it/she) is." The masculine noun temps means "time." The conjunction que means "that." The personal pronoun je means "I." The verb partemeans "(I) leave, may leave."
'As well as' in French can be translated as 'ainsi que' or 'ainsi que'.
"Only" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ne...que. The adverbial phrase translates literally as "not...that" in English. The pronunciation will be "nuh kuh" in French.
"That you be" and "That you may be" are English equivalents of the French phrase Que tu sois. The pronunciation of the present subjunctive phrase in the second person informal singular will be "kuh tyoo swa" in French.
"What do you want?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce que tu veux? The question translates literally as "What is this that you want?" in English. The pronunciation will be "keh-skuh tyoo veuh" in French.
"What time (weather)..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase ce que le temps... . The pronunciation of the uncompleted dependent clause will be "skul taw" in northerly French and "suh kuh luh taw" in southerly French.
"What do you do on weekends?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce que tu fais le week-end? The question also translates as "What do you make on weekends?" in English. The pronunciation will be "keh-skuh tyoo feh luh wea-kend" in French.
"But what are you trying to say? That you are French?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Mais que tentez-vous de dire? Que vous êtes français? The pronunciation will be "meh kuh taw-tey-voo duh deer kuh voo-zet fraw-seh" in French.
"What do you do for sport?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Que fais-tu comme sport? The question also translates as "What do you do for exercise?" and "What do you do for sports?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh feh-tyoo kuhm spor" in French.
"What do you do exactly?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce que tu fais exactement? The question also translates as "What exactly are you making?" in English. The pronunciation will be "keh-skuh tyoo feh meht-naw" in French.
"That the rabbits..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Que les lapins... .Specifically, the relative pronoun que is "that, which." The feminine/masculine plural definite article les means "the." The masculine noun lapins translates literally as "rabbits" and affectionately as "honey-bunnies."The pronunciation will be "kuh ley la-peh" in French.
"Can you?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Est-ce que tu peux? The question translates literally as "Is it that you can?" even though est-ce que, as a way of indicating a question that more simply may be asked Peux-tu?, need not be translated. The pronunciation will be "eh-skuh tyoo puh" in French.
"How is it that...?" is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Comment est-ce que...? The three words represent the beginning of a question whose complete phrasing may or may not include est-ce que, as the signal of an upcoming interrogative, in the final translation. The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw eh-skuh" in French.
"Where does MB come from?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase D'où est-ce que MB vient? The pronunciation of the question in the third person singular of the present indicative will be "doo eh-skuh em-bey vya" in French.