If you are the sole owner of the property you have the right to tell your inlaws that you do not want them visiting your home. If your relationship is that bad you should ask your spouse to visit with their parents at the parents' own home.If you are the sole owner of the property you have the right to tell your inlaws that you do not want them visiting your home. If your relationship is that bad you should ask your spouse to visit with their parents at the parents' own home.If you are the sole owner of the property you have the right to tell your inlaws that you do not want them visiting your home. If your relationship is that bad you should ask your spouse to visit with their parents at the parents' own home.If you are the sole owner of the property you have the right to tell your inlaws that you do not want them visiting your home. If your relationship is that bad you should ask your spouse to visit with their parents at the parents' own home.
why do u ask me this questions
The French ask "Do you live in Australia?" by saying: Habitez-vous à Australie? or Est-ce que tu habites à Australie?
<<Où habitez-vous?>> (oo aa-BEE-tay voo)
No.
Inlaws.
Do you mean to ask "HOW do you say 'long live France' in french"? Because your question "What does long live France mean"... does not make much sense... If you're asking how to say it in FRench, it is "Vive la France" as for what it means well... it means long live France... :o)
Tu-habites tu? or Tu-habitez vous? are both acceptable ways of asking where people live in French. You would reply, by saying: "J'habite a..." without the ellipses, followed by wherever it is that you live.
The verb 'to live' is 'vivre' in French.
ask a french person
Grandfather. Or his name, the same as you would any other inlaws.
why dont u ask a french person!