To say "I would like..." in French, you would say "Je voudrais..." If you were to say "Je voudrais acheter..," you would be saying "I would like to buy..."
You would say I'm screwed in french like je scewed.
The term is "bâtard" in French. For the English pronunciation, read it as you would in English, there is no real reference for this sort of question. I would say : "ba" like in back and "tar" like in target
There is no obvious way to say 'I like you' in french. Je t'aime means both 'I like you' and 'I love you', but commonly means only the latter. Je t'adore could be construed as 'I love you', but is the direct translation of 'I adore you'. In France, to say 'I like you' one would say Je t'aimes bien,which can approximately be translated as 'I like you just fine'.
this is how you say fourteen in french: quatorze. you write 14 in french the exact same way.
In french you say huit instead of eight. You say it like you say wheat.
To say "I would like" in French, you can say "Je voudrais."
she would like is spelled 'elle aimerait' in French.
You can say "je voudrais avoir" in French to mean "I would like to have."
You would say "Je l'aime" in Canadian French to express "I like him."
To say "what are they like" in French, you would say "Comment sont-ils?"
To say "she does not like" in French, you would say "elle n'aime pas".
Comme.
"mauvais" (that's a French word) To say it you would say - MOVAY - sounds like that.
you would say something like "porter"
You say it like this - je joue
To say "I like being" in French, you would say "J'aime être."
You would say I'm screwed in french like je scewed.