Ma soeur jumelle means 'my twin sister' in English.
"Je t'aime ma soeur" means "I love my sister" in English.
Do you have a sister? Avez-vous une soeur? or: As-tu une soeur? (less formal) You have a sister. Vous avez une soeur. or: Tu as une soeur.
"je t'aime, ma soeur" or "ma soeur, je t'aime"
literally "ma belle soeur vient", but this is confusing as "une belle-soeur" (hyphenated) is not a sister, but a sister-in-law. It would be better to say in a separate phrase "ma soeur est belle"
Bon anniversaire ma chère soeur
"avec ma sœur jumelle"
"Je t'aime ma soeur" means "I love my sister" in English.
ma soeur means 'my sister' in French.
Do you have a sister? Avez-vous une soeur? or: As-tu une soeur? (less formal) You have a sister. Vous avez une soeur. or: Tu as une soeur.
Ma soeur
That's gibberish. What could make sense is: nuit, meaning "night"; soeur jumelle ("twin sister"); aimez-vous (do you like); charger (to put a burden on)
My sister is my best friend.
it doesn't exist in french. Ma soeur = my sister
la chambre is bedroom and ma soeur means my sister. So... teqnically it means the bedroom of my sister but in English it would mean my sisters bedroom.
With my sister's best friend.
"je t'aime, ma soeur" or "ma soeur, je t'aime"
My sister is an English equivalent of 'ma soeur'. The feminine possessive 'ma' means 'my'. The feminine noun 'soeur' means 'sister'. Together, they're pronounced 'mah suhr'.Note. When a french-speaker refers to 'ma soeur' he is talking about his sister; however, when he addresses someone as 'ma soeur' he is talking to a nun. The latter case translates as "Sister", while the former is "my sister".