le, la, les are articles in French. You put them before a noun:
le (followed by a masculine noun) > le matin
la (followed by a feminine noun) > la voiture
le (followed by a plural of any gender)
The article l' stands for the singular le or la, meaning you can use it with a singular masculine or feminine noun, when the word begins by a vowel sound.
ex: eau (water) is feminine, and the article should be 'la', but it is replaced by l', for the purpose of pronounciation. > l'eau est froide = the water is cold
ex 2: oiseau (bird) is masculine, and the article should be 'le', but it is replaced by l', for the purpose of pronounciation. > l'oiseau chante = the bird is singing
4 ways to say "the" in French:Le (in front of a singular, masculine word that starts with a consonant)La (in front of a singular, feminine word that starts with a consonant)L' (in front of any singular word that starts with a vowel)Les (in front of a plural word)
the has no gender in french considering you say the girl or the boy in English it would be LA fille ou LE garçon in french
"L'intrus" in French means "the intruder" or "the outsider." It refers to someone who does not belong or is not part of a particular group or situation.
Willy is spelled the same in French.
The root word for "gorgeous" is "gorge," which comes from the Old French word "gorge," meaning throat or neck. Over time, the meaning evolved to refer to something beautiful or splendid.
le, la, l' you put them unfront of nouns :)
4 ways to say "the" in French:Le (in front of a singular, masculine word that starts with a consonant)La (in front of a singular, feminine word that starts with a consonant)L' (in front of any singular word that starts with a vowel)Les (in front of a plural word)
Il
on the front or in the back.
Put an L in front of the word "Inn". Now, think of how you would pronounce the word "Ikea". Take the last part (-ea) and add it to the Linn to get Linnea.
the ( preceding a word beginning with a vowel)
Livre
libre, liberté, large, lion
'L ' amour' meaning 'the love'.
Front Seat Chronicles - 2012 The 'L' Word 2-2 was released on: USA: 3 May 2012
Astronaute is a French equivalent of the English word "astronaut."Specifically, the French word can be either a feminine or a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is l. The apostrophe is placed immediately after the letter l and immediately before the first letter of the noun.The pronunciation is "ah-stroh-noht."
Enthusiasme is a literal French equivalent of the English word "enthusiasm." The masculine singular word may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular l' since French employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(l)aw-tyoo-zyasm" in Alsatian French and "(l)aw-tyoo-zya-smuh" in Cevenol French.