The French phrase 'et vous' means and [what about] you. In the word-by-word translation, the conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The personal pronoun 'vous' means 'you'.
and you
if it is a question
translate it with
And you ? or And how about you ? or and what about you ?
Je vais bien, et vous ?
I am fine, and how about you ?
"Yours forever" and "Forever yours" are two English equivalents of the French phrase à toi pour toujours. The pronunciation will be "a twa poor too-zhoor" in French.
"Be quiet! He's sick. Do you understand?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Tais-toi! Il est malade. Tu comprends? The pronunciation will be "teh-twa ee-ley ma-lad tyoo ko-praw" in French.
Decris-toi translated into English from French means"describe yourself".
"What's your place like?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase C'est comment chez toi? The pronunciation of the interrogative in the present indicative -- which translates literally as "It's how at your place?" -- will be "sey ku-maw shey twa" in French.
"You and your family travel a lot!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ta famille et toi, vous voyagez beaucoup!The declarative/exclamatory statement translates literally as "Your family and you, you all travel a lot!" in English. The pronunciation will be "ta fa-mee ey twa voo vwa-ya-zhey bo-koo" in French.
'toi' is 'you' (singular and informal) in French.
Et toi? is a French equivalent of the English phrase "How about you?"Specifically, the conjunction et means "and." The personal pronoun toi means "(informal singular) you." The pronunciation is "et twah."
"And you then?" literally and "And what about you?" loosely are English equivalents of the French phrase Et toi donc? The pronunciation will be "ey twa donk" in French.
The English phrase, "Show me your ticket" is "Montre toi ton billet" in French.
bien is the translation of well in French. Toi is the translation of you in French.
"You, China!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Toi, Chine! The pronunciation of the emphatic pronoun in the second person informal singular and the feminine proper noun will be "twa sheen" in French.
"Yours forever" and "Forever yours" are two English equivalents of the French phrase à toi pour toujours. The pronunciation will be "a twa poor too-zhoor" in French.
"Tais toi" is a French phrase that translates to "shut up" in English. It is a command telling someone to be quiet or stop talking.
"Is it you?" is literal English equivalent of the French phrase Est-ce toi? The pronunciation of the interrogative in the third person impersonal singular of the present indicative -- which also translates as "Is this you?" -- will be "eh-stwa" in French.
et toi
"Toi aussi"
"Thank you! Take care of yourself!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Merci! Prends soin de toi!The pronunciation will be "mer-see praw sweh duh twa" in French.