A "raison" is a French term that translates to "reason" or "cause" in English. In a philosophical context, it refers to the underlying principle or justification for a particular belief, action, or phenomenon. It is often used to explain the logic or motivation behind a decision or argument.
Raison d'être
tu es ma raison d'être, ma raison de vivre
The sentence 'Ouais tu as raison' means Yeah, you're right [or you're correct]. In the word-by-word translation, the adverb 'ouais' means 'yeah'. The personal pronoun 'tu' means 'you'. The verb 'as' means '[you] have'. And the noun 'raison' means 'reason'.
On a coat, a vest, a shirt .. ; on a machine. Un bouton.To button (up) - Bouttoner. Idiom To be right on the button - Avoir entièrement raison. Un bouton a button le bouton the button les boutons the buttons
Roughly- Reason is folly ( or foolishness)- But the strength of Reason is less strong than the folly. You really can"t translate it beyond that. One is reminded of the remarks attributed to Abe Lincoln- you can fool all of the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time- but not all of the people, all of the time ( one adds some politicians come close like .999 percent!) My guess the phrase has some political argumentive point.
Milton Raison's birth name is Milton Michael Raison.
André Raison died in 1719.
Timothy Raison was born in 1929.
Timothy Raison died in 2011.
Max Raison was born in 1901.
Max Raison died in 1988.
Michel Raison was born in 1949.
Miranda Raison is 165 cm.
Vous avez raison. -- You are right/correct.
tu as raison / vous avez raison
yes , if persons nickname is raison bran
Milton Raison went by Mike.