You shouldn't try to translate this one word for word because it's more idiomatic in nature. I would probably translate this as "Live life to the fullest."
"C'est la vie" is a common English colloquialism taken from the French phrase to mean, "Such is life". Literal translation: "It's life"
"ma petite vie" means 'my little life'.
menez la vie... means 'lead the life ...' in French.
Life.
in my life
vivre pleinement - croquer le vie à pleines dents
"C'est la vie" is a common English colloquialism taken from the French phrase to mean, "Such is life". Literal translation: "It's life"
it's not you , it's life
There is no such word in English. -You possibly mean "C'est la vie" , a French phrase, loosely meaning "that's life' .
The phrase '[c'est] quoi une vie' means what [is] one life. In the word-by-word translation, the pronoun 'quoi' means 'what'. The indefinite article 'une' means 'a, an, one'. And the noun 'vie' means 'life'.
La vie = life dans = in It appears the sentence, or phrase is incomplete. FYI: dans la vie = "in life". As in: (What you do) "for a living", "your work", "your career"
Je changerai ma viec'est la phrase 'Je change ma vie' au futur.
"Meilleures amies pour la vie" in the feminine and "meilleurs amis pour la vie" in the masculine are French equivalents of the English phase "Best friends for life."Specifically, the feminine plural adjective "meilleures" and the masculine "meilleurs" mean "best." The feminine noun "amies" and the masculine "amis" mean "friends. " The preposition "pour" means "for." The feminine singular definite article "la" means "the." The feminine noun "vie" means "life."The pronunciation is "meh-yeuhr-zah-mee poor lah vee."
Nôtre belle vie
la nouvelle vie
"It's life"
French is the language from which the phrase C'est la vie! comes. The declarative statement typically translates into English as "That's life!" The pronunciation will be "sey la vee" in French.