Yes, 'Eat up' may be an English equivalent of 'Mange'. The word in French is the second person singular form of the infinitive 'manger', which means 'to eat'. It's in the imperative tense of command. It's pronounced 'mawnj'.*
*The sound 'aw' is similar to the sound in the English noun 'lawn'.
The literal translation from French is "you eat".
It's either the first person or third person singular of "to eat". Je mange - I eat Il/Elle/On mange - He/She/One eats
Mange bien
"je mangeais" is the past form of "je mange" je mange = I eat, I am eating je mangeais = I was eating
Je mange des sandwiches
The literal translation from French is "you eat".
Qu'est-ce que mange une vache? in French means "What does a cow eat?" in English.
Sort of, it really just means "eat".
Mange, Beve, e essere sposato
Mangia! is a literal Italian equivalent of the French word Mange! The verb -- which means "Eat!" in English -- is in the second person informal singular of the present imperative in both cases. The respective pronunciation will be "MAN-dja" in Italian and "mawnzh" in French.
It's either the first person or third person singular of "to eat". Je mange - I eat Il/Elle/On mange - He/She/One eats
"Mange tout" is a French phrase. It means "eat all".
(je) mange tôt means '(I) eat early' in French.
to eat
"Maître" is a French word that starts with "MA," which translates to "master" or "teacher" in English.
Je mange is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I eat." The first person singular subject pronoun and present indicative verb also translate into English as "I'm eating," "I am eating," or "I do eat" according to context. The pronunciation will be "zhuh mawzh" in French.
"Ann's family does not eat often at the restaurant"