La Chaim is Hebrew for "To Life." It is generally used as a toast, especially in regards to the Jewish New Year Rosh Hashana.
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∙ 14y agoLa vie = life dans = in It appears the sentence, or phrase is incomplete. FYI: dans la vie = "in life". As in: (What you do) "for a living", "your work", "your career"
It mean's "that's death." It is similar to the phrase "c'est la vie" ("that's life"), but carries a considerably more negative connotation.
La pantera rosa is a term or phrase in Spanish. When translated from Spanish to English, it means The Pink Panther as a female. The Pink Panther is a character in a TV show in fact.
Chaim means both "life" and "living."
A literal translation would be : "La vie t'arrive que tu sois prêt ou pas." The french phrase "C'est la vie." carries somewhat the same meaning.
Viva la vida means live the life
Hasta= Until La= The Vista= View/Eyesight The closest English phrase is 'See you later'.
There are many variations of this name from Chaim to Higham, Heyem. Hyams, Hyman and so on. As an alternative there is a Jewish word 'Khayim' meaning 'life'. However Chaim or the variations is English in origin from Bedfordshire, Derbyshire and Essex shariing the same meaning of 'high homestead' recorded in about 1086
La vie = life dans = in It appears the sentence, or phrase is incomplete. FYI: dans la vie = "in life". As in: (What you do) "for a living", "your work", "your career"
leh-khah-yeem = לחיים
A La Carte means 'from the menu' in French. It is used in menus at restaurants to segregate a set of meals from the rest of the items available to order.
"According to the novella (short story)," "to the new person," and "until the news" are English equivalents of the French phrase à la nouvelle. Regardless of context or meaning, the pronunciation of the feminine singular prepositional phrase will be "a la noo-vel" in French.
Chaim I. Chaim Ycyk Bermant has written: 'Jericho sleep alone'
"Even the best cook burns the beans."
"The base" or "the basis" may be English equivalents of the French phrase "la base."Specifically, the feminine singular definite article "la" means "the." The feminine noun "base" includes among its meaning "base, basis, (linguistic) root." The pronunciation is "lah bahz."
La La La - Lil Wayne
Yes, the French phrase la maison is in the feminine. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which translates as "the house" -- will be "la meh-zo" in French.