I don't understand why you say so
I say.
"how do you say he is called" is translated "Comment est-ce que tu dis qu'il s'appelle ?" in French
"But take care, I'm telling you!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Mais garde, dis donc! The statement translates literally as "But look out, I say therefore!" in English. The pronunciation will be "dee donk" in French.
It means: please tell me one tiny word in french, just one
Literally, 'je te dis merde' means " I tell you sh*t ". Figuratively, it is an equivalent of "break a leg" or "good luck"
"Pourquoi tu me dis ça ?"
"Why do you say no?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Pourquoi tu dis non? The question also translates as "Why are you saying no?" in English. The pronunciation will be "poor-kwa tyoo dee no" in French.
"pourquoi me dites-vous ça ?" "pourquoi est-ce que tu me dis ça ?" (more familiar)
"why do you say no"
'Dis fromage' means 'say cheese' in French.
"why do you say I am sorry" translates as "pourquoi est-ce que tu dis que tu es désolé(e)" in French.
"I say"
Sorry, but this not french, at least not with this orthography. Did you take it from a song?
dis moi pourquoi tu fais ça avec moi means "tell me why you are doing this with me"
The French word "dis" is the second-person singular imperative form of the verb "dire," which means "to say" or "to tell." It is used to give a command or instruction to someone.
dis-moi (informal) or "dites-moi" (formal and/or plural)
"say, tell": dis moi tout = tell me everythingne dis rien = don't say a thing