Je t'aime means 'I love you'
Je parle francais = i speak french je t'aime = i love you hope this helps :)
I'm french and I can tell you that doesn't mean anything, and I can manage to understand what you mean... vous = you, pou = ?, aime = love, je = I and qui=who
"I do not love you, it should not be hard to understand"
'Je t'aime' means 'I love you'. Depends on the whole sentence.
that's a French sentence needing some improvement. je t'aime Kane, tu ne sais pas à quel point = I love you Kane, you don't know how much
J'adore or je taime
Je parle francais = i speak french je t'aime = i love you hope this helps :)
"I love you" in French is "Je t'aime."
Je t'aime means "I love you" or "I like you"
ah fook you je taime bonjour.
Je taime New York.
I'm french and I can tell you that doesn't mean anything, and I can manage to understand what you mean... vous = you, pou = ?, aime = love, je = I and qui=who
No, "J' taime" is not proper French. The correct way to say "I love you" in French is "Je t'aime." The apostrophe is placed between the "e" and the "a" to indicate the elision of the "e" in "me" before a vowel sound.
"qui mais je t'aime plus bébé" translates literally as "who but I love you more darling" in French.
Jai taime The French way would be: Je t'aime
(je) t'aime - (I) love you
"I do not love you, it should not be hard to understand"