les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
Las biblioteques
Las chicas is the plural form of the Spanish phrase la chica. The feminine phrase translates as "the girls" in the plural and "the girl" in the singular in English. The pronunciation will be "las TCHEE-kas" in the plural and "la TCHEE-ka" in the singular in Uruguayan Spanish.
'il' is the masculine form of "the". ...the femminine version is 'la'
The plural of l'amie (friend, singular feminine) is les amies. (plural feminine). The French articles are le for masculine and la for feminine, but in front of a vowel it is l' .
Segnarsi la data! in the singular or plural, Segnati la data! in the singular and Segnatevi la data! in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English phrase "Save the date!" Context makes clear whether one "you" (cases 1, 2) or two or more "you all" (examples 1, 3) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "sey-NYAR-see la DA-ta" in the singular and plural, "SEY-nya-tee la DA-ta" in the singular and "sey-NYA-tey-vee la DA-ta" in the plural in Italian.
The plural form of "la" is "las"
Qual'è la data? in Italian means "What is the date?" in English.
The plural form of "la biblioteca" is "las bibliotecas."
In French, the plural form of "la dame" is "les dames".
Laghi is an Italian equivalent of the English word "lakes".Specifically, the word is a masculine noun in its plural form. It may be preceded by the masculine plural definite article i ("the") or the masculine plural indefinite article dei ("some"). The pronunciation will be "LA-ghee" in Italian.
Gli studenti is one Italian equivalent of 'students'. It's a masculine gender noun in the plural. Its singular form is 'lo studente'. Le studentesse is another Italian equivalent. It's a feminine gender noun in the plural. Its singular form is 'la studentessa'.
"The date" in English means la data in Italian.
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
las plumaes
Las biblioteques
las jovenes