What do you mean by "yes yes". In English for someone to use the word twice can be a sign of impatience or arrogance...in french using the word "oui" which = yes twice would carry a similar connotation.
In French, "yes yes" can be translated as "oui oui." It does sound similar to "wee wee" in English, but "oui oui" is the correct phrase in French for saying yes twice.
The French word haute sounds like "oat" (the H is silent), and then koo-TOOR.The term is pronounced many different ways, as it is a French term but often spoken in English context.(the correct French pronunciation is at the related audio link)
toile
Jesus, like in English but sounds like Jeyzu.
The English word chair translates to the French chaise, which sounds like "shezz". The French word chair, which translates to the English flesh, sounds like "share".
bizzare but it sounds better if you say it like my friend Corrine with a "crazy insane" French accent
"c'est la guerre": that's war.
there are no direct words that translate to "house of horrors" however the combination of words that would most closely resemble "house of horrors" in French translate into English as "I hate the United States" . By the way, the English phrase "smells like sh_t" sounds like the French phrase that, translated into English, means "I am a Frenchman".
me -- moi (sounds like "mwah")
"How" as in "how do you do it" is comment (sounds like kuh-MAH, with the second syllable being nasal) "How" as in "how happy are you" doesn't really exist in French, although you might use the phrase "à quelle mesure" in a formal context.
The English word chair translates to the French chaise, which sounds like "shezz". The French word chair, which translates to the English flesh, sounds like "share".
les sounds quite like layil sounds like eel
The French word haute sounds like "oat" (the H is silent), and then koo-TOOR.The term is pronounced many different ways, as it is a French term but often spoken in English context.(the correct French pronunciation is at the related audio link)
"Su Diev" is not a French phrase. It sounds like it could be Lithuanian, translating to "by God" in English.
Sounds like "Do you feel like I do", that was a phrase from a Peter Frampton song by the same title.
neuf sounds like nerf
It's treize. It sounds like Trez.
It's treize. It sounds like Trez.