"Oh, crap!" in English is Et merde! or Oh merde!in French.
Ouh là là! is an Onomatopoeia, it means nothing. It can be used in French when you have a sad surprise, as "oh my God" in English.
Crap is just a word you can use instead of saying s h i t .No, the word crap is not considered to be a bad word in the English language.
Bakugan Sucks Cause They "Oh No" And That Kinda Crap. But Pokemon Kicks Ass!
There was the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Movie that was in English, and there is the newer one that will premiere soon in English, Yu-Gi-Oh! Super Fusion! Bonds That Transcend Time.
Oh, the horror! This looks like an auto-translated English typo! I'd imagine this is what you might get if you put this sentence into an online translator:I love you so much your my everythingBut of course it would have been nice if punctuation had been used and if "your" had been spelled correctly as you're. The corrected French sentence would beJe t'aime tellement. Tu es mon tout.I'm not French, so I can't speak to the validity of the phrase "mon tout", but a Google search of French pages for this phrase gets lots of results, so it looks like the expression exists in French too.
Oh là là! in French is "Oh baby!" in English.
"(They) have" is a literal English equivalent of the French word ont. The pronunciation of the present indicative of avoir ("to have") in the third person plural will be "oh" in French.
"According to whim" and "at will" are just two English equivalents of the French phrase au gré. The pronunciation will be "oh grey" in French.
It is a French swear word, the English equivalent of which is "Oh, s - - -!"
"Oh! my nest!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Ah! mon nid! The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase -- which also translates as "Oh! my den!" and "Oh! my love-nest!" -- will be "ah moh nee" in French.
"One has to" is an English equivalent of the French phrase On doit. The declarative statement also translates as "One must (need)" or "One owes" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "oh dwa" in French.
Savarin aux fraises is a French equivalent of the English phrase "strawberry savarin." The French dessert in question may be translated as "kirsch or rum syrup-soaked, rich, ring-molded yeast cake with strawberries" in English. The pronunciation will be "sa-va-reh oh frehz" in French.
"Ohh my" can be translated to "Oh la la" in French.
Same thing, oh.
"Oh boy" in French can be translated as "oh la la" or "oh là là".
"oh well" can be translated to "eh bien" in French.
"Oh no! There's a fire!" in English is Oh no! C'è fuoco!in Italian.