"tu aimes quoi comme genre de musique" is informal / spoken French for 'what do you like as a style of music?'
roughly i believe it means Genre and death, Evil lives (kind of a latin/french mix)
Genre can have a few meanings depending on context. It can mean "type" as in what type of thing is this. It can mean "gender" in the linguistic sense as nouns in French have a "gender". La Chaise is a "female" word, le chapeau is a "male" word. Adverbs, verbs, will "change" to conform to the noun they represent. La chaise bleue, le chapeau bleu.
The only words I can think of at the moment are: "genre" and "entendre" (as in "double-entendre") Will add more as they come to mind.
Fiction
speculative fiction... i think
if you mean the verb so it's 'aimer' if you mean the common word so it's 'comme' but also in common language, you can say 'genre'
Genre: Music of the world - Weltmusik - Musique du monde
Mostly various forms of rock, but he did other things as well, such as musique concrete.
genre
the same reason bodies by drowning pool goes into classical musique genre theyre dumbasses
The term from French is genre (jhawn-ruh), a type or classification.
"Ce" is the French word for "this" in the masculine genre.
Simon Gaunt has written: 'Gender and Genre in Medieval French Literature (Cambridge Studies in French)' 'Gender and genre in medieval French literature'
'du genre'
quel genre
That is the correct spelling of "genre" (jhahn-ruh), French term meaning a subdivision by type or subject.
French Pop