how do you feel with your ...
How are you feeling today translates as "Comment te sens-tu aujourd'hui ?", "comment est-ce que tu te sens aujourd'hui ?", or "comment vas-tu aujourd'hui ?" in French.
"What street do you live on?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tu habites dans quelle rue? The question translates literally as "You live in which street?" in English. The pronunciation will be "tyoo a-beet daw kel ryoo" in French.
It's the meaning of life.
meaning -> signification (f), or sens (m)
literally "je me sens fabuleux" (sounds weird in French: if one is felling very well, one says "je me sens super-bien" or "fabuleusement bien")
I feel
How are you feeling today translates as "Comment te sens-tu aujourd'hui ?", "comment est-ce que tu te sens aujourd'hui ?", or "comment vas-tu aujourd'hui ?" in French.
Je me sens bien is "I feel good / I feel fine" in English.
je sens is 'I feel' or 'I smell' in French.
Tu me sens means 'do you feel me?' (could mean 'smell' instead of 'feel' depending of the context).
"Que veut dire faire la main à quelqu'un dans un sens péjoratif" means "What does it mean to hand to someone in a derogatory sense" in English.
"Sens" in French can mean "meaning," "direction," or "sense" depending on the context in which it is used.
The root word sens means "Feeling".
je sais comment tu te sens, je sais ce que tu ressens
Common sense is "le bon sens" in French. You could also hear the more literary (or at least used a high level of language) expression "le sens commun", but this is much less in use.
How are you- Comment ça va? Comment alley-vous? Comment vas-tu? How do you feel- Comment vous sentez-vous? Sentir- the verb/le verbe "to feel" Comment Ça va can also be used informally to ask a person how they're feeling. I am not feeling well- Je ne me sens pas bien. Non, ça ne va pas. How- Comment (you formal) feel- vous sentez
'les cinq sens' are 'the five senses' in French. Le gout (also spelled goût) is the taste.