Trois heures moins le quart is a French equivalent of the English time "2:45." It may be followed immediately by du matin ("in the morning") or de l'après-midi ("in the afternoon") or replaced conversationally and informally by the literal deux heures quarante-cinq ("two hours forty-five [minutes]"). The respective pronunciations will be "twa-zur mweh luh kar (dyoo ma-teh, dla-preh-mee-dee)" and "du-zur keh-rawnt-senk" in French.
In French, -45 is said as "moins quarante-cinq" which translates to "minus forty-five" in English.
Assuming you're talking about age, it would be "J'ai quarante-cinq ans." If you're talking about a number in an order, like a race for example, you could say "Je suis le quarante-cinquième" which is translated to "I am the forty-fifth", or you could also say "Je suis le numéro quarante-cinq" which is translated to "I am number forty-five".
quarante cinqex : 11:45 = onze heures quarante cinq
You can say "J'ai vécu pendant 45 ans" in French to mean "I lived for 45 years."
It is a phrase generally used in telling time, meaning "minus 15". For example, if one wanted to say 1:45, they would put it as 2 o clock "minus 15".
to say forty five is quarante cinq
"Great" in English is balaise or chouette in French.
Da 45 giorni netto in Italian means "Pay within 45 days" in English.
In French, -45 is said as "moins quarante-cinq" which translates to "minus forty-five" in English.
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Assuming you're talking about age, it would be "J'ai quarante-cinq ans." If you're talking about a number in an order, like a race for example, you could say "Je suis le quarante-cinquième" which is translated to "I am the forty-fifth", or you could also say "Je suis le numéro quarante-cinq" which is translated to "I am number forty-five".
"The time, 4:45" is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete Spanish phrase la hora, 4:45. The phrase may refer to 15 minutes before 5:00 in the morning or in the evening unless the military, 24-hour clock is used, in which case the pre-dawn hour suits. The pronunciation will be "la O-ra KWA-tro kwa-REN-ta-SEEN-ko" in Uruguayan Spanish.
12:45 = douze heures quarante cinq / or / une heure moins le quart (more like "a quarter to one)
Numeri fino a quarantacinque is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "numbers up to 45." The phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine plural i since Italian employs definite articles even where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ee) NOO-mey-ree FEE-no a kwa-RAN-ta-TCHEEN-kwey" in Pisan Italian.
quarante cinqex : 11:45 = onze heures quarante cinq
Une heure moins le quart is a French equivalent of the English phrase "quarter to 1:00." The phrase may be followed immediately by du matin ("in the morning") or de l'après-midi ("in the afternoon"), with the latter sometimes replaced by treize heures quarante-cinq ("13 hours 45 [minutes]") according to the military, 24-hour clock. The respective pronunciations will be "yoo-nur mweh luh kar (dyoo ma-teh)" and "yoo-nur mweh luh kar (duh la-preh-mee-dee)" in French.
You can say "J'ai vécu pendant 45 ans" in French to mean "I lived for 45 years."