Key = Clavis
ki pronounced: key
Key in French is CléExample.. 'key word' is translated to 'mot clé'You will also find clefs (no stress on the "e"). Both are correct.
"ki" sounds like the English word key
It means: here you have the key to my heart.
Clé de ton coeur is a French equivalent of the English phrase "key to your heart." The phrase, which translates literally as "key of your heart," may be preceded immediately by the feminine singular la since French employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(la) kleyd toh kur" in French.
"May he (she) rest in peace" is an English equivalent of the Latin phrase Requiescat in pace. The phrase may be found abbreviated as RIP and written as Requiescat in pacem even though the latter will not be found in the Latin version of the Burial Service, Office for the Dead and Requiem Mass in the Liber usualis. The pronunciation will be "REY-kwee-EY-ska-teen PA-tchey" in Church Latin and "REY-kwee-ES-kat in PA-key" in classical Latin.
Ibn Sina, also known as Avicenna, wrote a medical encyclopedia called the Canon of Medicine. It was translated into Latin and became a key medical text in Europe during the Middle Ages.
¿Quieres tener sexo? (key-air-ace tay-nare sex-oh?)
Che spreco! is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "What a waste!" The masculine singular phrase translates literally as "What waste!" in English. The pronunciation will be "key SPREH-ko" in Pisan Italian.
Toi qui... is a French equivalent of the incomplete Spanish phrase Tu che... . The phrase translates as "You who..." in English. The respective pronunciations will be "twa kee" in French and "too key" in Spanish.
Espressioni chiave is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "key phrases." The feminine plural phrase literally means "key expressions" and shows the tendency of a noun used as an adjective (chiave, "key") remains invariable in the singular even when the noun that it describes is in the plural. The pronunciation will be "EY-spres-SYO-nee KYA-vey" in Pisan Italian.
Chiave al mio cuore is a literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "key to my heart." The feminine singular noun, combined preposition and masculine singular definite article, masculine singular possessive adjective, and masculine singular noun may be preceded by the feminine singular definite article la ("the") or indefinite una ("a," "an"). The pronunciation will be "KYA-vey al MEE-o KWO-rey" in Italian.
La clé à ton/votre coeur or La clé de ton/votre coeur
Che meraviglia! is a close Italian equivalent of the English phrase "How wonderful!" The feminine singular phrase translates literally as "What wonder!" in English. The pronunciation will be "key MEY-ra-VEE-lya" in Pisan Italian.
"What's happening?" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Che succede? The phrase as part of a declarative statement contrastingly translates into English as "that (which, who) happens... ." The pronunciation will be "key soot-TCHEY-dey" in Italian.
Key = Clavis