== == Well, it means 'All, then', which you will agree means nothing at all. What you've probably heard is 'Zut alors', which means 'Oh, bother', or 'dearie me' or possibly something a little stronger. Or you may have heard 'À tout à l'heure', which is roughly translated 'see you soon'. It basically means see you later.
"tout, alors" means 'all, then' in French. The phrase resembles "à tout à l'heure" which means 'see you later'
An exclamation for ''too bad''
The sentence 'Alors vous parlez francais' means So you speak French. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'alors' means 'in that case, so'. The personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'. The verb 'parlez' means '[you] speak'. And the noun 'francais' means 'French'.
"This is not a pipe."
The french phrase "aller a la piscine" means "go to the pool" in english. In french, "piscine" mean "pool".
The phrase 'alors nous' means What about us. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'alors' means 'in that case, then'. And the personal pronoun 'nous' means 'we, us'.
"Ça alors", is an expression used in French for exclamation. It is similar to "wow", "amazing" etc. in English.
"tout, alors" means 'all, then' in French. The phrase resembles "à tout à l'heure" which means 'see you later'
The adverb 'alors' may mean in that case, then. Or it may mean so. Or in the phrase 'alors que', it means whereas, when, even though.
alors on danse ? means 'so, do we dance?' in French?
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
"Oh my!, "Oh dear!" It also may mean darn or d**n.
"Alors tu t'exprimes en français" translates as "So, you're expressing yourself in French".
The French exclamation "zut alors !" corresponds roughly to the English "shucks" / "shoot" / "holy cow" / "dang".
The French equivalent of the English phrase, to have, is: avoir.
An exclamation for ''too bad''
The phrase 'et alors' means and so?, andso what?, or so what? In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'et' means 'and'. And the adverb 'alors' means 'in a short while, then'.