"You pay what you weigh" in English means Vous payez ce que vous pesez in French.
pagherai
"Her country" and "his country" are English equivalents of the French phrase son pays. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "its country" and "one's country" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "so pay-ee" in Alsatian French.
mentally challenged --> handicappé mental -- "ah[n]-dee-kah-pay mah[n]-tahl"
Well, first of all, in English it's incompetent. The French words are incapable (ahn-kah-PAH-bluh) or incompétent (ahn-kom-pay-TAHN)
You can just shout: Attention ! and in French it is followed with the preposition à (for in English): frenchspanishonline.com/magazine/watch-out-in-french/
Pay is an English word which in French is Payer. There is no French word "Pay".
If pagues is Spanish, then it means payer in French and pay in English. If pagues is English, then it means pagues in French.
potresti/ (formal) potrebbe pagarmi?
Pay more taxes to help pay for the war
payer is the French word for "to pay"
loosely translated....it means im going to hit you.
"All that she pays" is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Tout ce qu'elle paie. The pronunciation of the dependent clause in the third person feminine singular of the present indicative -- which translates literally as "all that which she does pay/is paying/pays" -- will be "too skel peh" in northerly French and "too suh kel peh" in southerly French.