"Completely crazy" is an English equivalent of the French phrase tout fou.
Specifically, the adverb tout means "all, completely." The masculine adjective fou means "crazy, mad." The pronunciation is "too foo."
"tout, alors" means 'all, then' in French. The phrase resembles "à tout à l'heure" which means 'see you later'
'On s'aimerait tout bas' is French for 'we would whisper'.
tout VA bien, tout est OK
The phrase 'tout en quilt' means everything in [the proper manner and style of a] quilt, all quilted. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'tout' means 'all'. The preposition 'en' means 'in'. And the noun 'quilt' has the same meaning in French as in English.
The French phrase 'tout le temps' may mean all the time, the entire time, or the whole time. In the word-by-word translation, the adjective 'tout' means 'entire, whole'. The definite article 'le' means 'the'. And the noun 'temps' means 'time'.
Pour tout le monde is a French equivalent of the English phrase "for everyone." The masculine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "for all the world" in English. The pronunciation will be "poor tool mond" in French.
"Immediately!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Tout de suite! The adverbial phrase also translates as "Right now!" or "Straightaway!" in English. The pronunciation will be "too sweet" in northerly French and "too duh sweet" in southerly French.
"Mange tout" is a French term that translates to "eat all" in English. It is used to refer to a specific type of pea, known as snow peas or sugar snap peas, which are commonly used in cooking.
"See you soon!" loosely and "Until right on the hour" literally are English equivalents of the French phrase À tout � l'heure! The pronunciation of the adverbial phrase of time will be "a too-ta-luhr" in French.
Tout droit is a masculine, not a feminine, phrase in French. The adverb and masculine singular adjective translate into English as "straight ahead." The pronunciation will be "too dwa" in French.
"Completely for us!" and "Everything for us!" are English equivalents of the French phrase Tout pour nous!Specifically the word tout is "all, completely, entirely, wholely" as an adverb and "all, everything" as a masculine noun. The preposition pour means "for". The personal pronoun nous translates as "us" in this context.The pronunciation will be "too poor noo" in French.
"It's all over" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Tout est fini."Specifically, the pronoun "tout" means "all, everything." The verb "est" means "(he/she/it) is." The masculine singular past participle "fini" means "done, finished, over, terminated."The pronunciation is "too-teh fee-nee."
Tout droit in French means "(Go) straight ahead" in English.
It means- You are a rose for all to see
Tout sur mon in the masculine and Tout sur ma in the feminine are French equivalents of the English phrase "all about my."Specifically, the masculine noun tout means "all, everything." The preposition sur means "about, on, over." The masculine possessive adjective mon and the feminine ma mean "my."The respective pronunciations are "too syoor moh" and "too syoor mah."
"tout, alors" means 'all, then' in French. The phrase resembles "à tout à l'heure" which means 'see you later'
"All the love" is an English equivalent of the French phrase tout l'amour.Specifically, the masculine adjective tout means "all." The masculine singular definite article le* means "the." The masculine noun amour means "love."The pronunciation will be "too lah-moor" in French.*The vowel e drops before -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- when the immediately following noun begins with a vowel.