You can say "les choses changent" in French to mean "things change."
"Tu es Français" means "You are French" in French.
"Tisha" does not have a specific meaning in French. It is not a common French word or name.
Shanoy isn't a French name, and doesn't mean anything in French.
"Jus tssu shou" is not a phrase in French. It does not have a meaning in the French language.
Cheri/e
You can say "les choses changent" in French to mean "things change."
The answer to the question is: Cheri is French for chéri{A} beloved, darling, precious{N} sweet, sugar, honey, poppet
The phrase 'special things' is translated into French as choses speciales, choses particulieres. In the word-by-word translation, the noun 'choses' means 'things'. The adjectives 'particulieres' and 'speciales' mean 'special'. If the meaning is 'the special things', then the phrase in French is 'les choses speciales', 'les choses particulieres'. For the definite article 'les' means 'the'. If the meaning is 'some special things', then the phrase in French is 'des choses speciales', 'des choses particulieres'.
The French word for 'things' is choses. It's a feminine gender noun in the plural. The singular form is 'chose'. The feminine definite article 'les' is used with the word, in the construction 'les choses', to mean 'the things'. The feminine indefinite article 'des' is used with the word, in the construction 'des choses', to mean 'some things'.
or is that
That phrase is not good French. The french expression ma petite cherie (referring to a woman) or mon petit cheri(referring to a man) is a term of affection, like "sweetheart" or "my dear".Literally it means "my little dear one".
dear dear
dear
You use "ces" to mean "these": Qu'est-ce que ces choses? - What are these things? Ces filles sont fatiguées - These girls are tired.
beaucoup de choses à faire = lots of things to do
"chéri tarte à la carte" are French words, but make no sense. That would read "sweetheart tart choice menu"