"Good night" in French is "bonne nuit."
would be "ca sonne bien" as a direct translation ( the sound is ok). But if you say it meaning "it a good idea", you would rather say : Ç'est une bonne idée. I don't think there's a french equivalence to this expression
The word for 'sounds' in French is "sons".
Yes, "en quelle langue" is the correct way to say "In what language" in French.
In French, "with" is typically translated as "avec."
"Good night" in French is "bonne nuit."
Amuse-toi bien !
c'est trés bon
good bye in mardarin Chinese - zai jian in french - Aurevior We can see this is how you say it in french and mardrin but how do you say it in the English language, no not how we speack English but like british language!!!
would be "ca sonne bien" as a direct translation ( the sound is ok). But if you say it meaning "it a good idea", you would rather say : Ç'est une bonne idée. I don't think there's a french equivalence to this expression
The word for 'sounds' in French is "sons".
There is no such thing as a belgian language, their official languages are Dutch, French, and German
It sounds like "koo-BOee" (the French language doesn't have all the diphthongs of English, so when the French imitate them it just sounds like two separate vowels instead of the glide that native speakers do) also, note they spell it with a hyphen: cow-boy
There is no term for good morning in French. You should say "Bonjour" (it would just sound odd if you said 'Bon jeudi jour' just as it sounds odd in English if you said 'Good Thursday morning).
Français
"mauvais" (that's a French word) To say it you would say - MOVAY - sounds like that.
You say, "zut" ! It sounds like 'zoot'