You say un crayon in French.
un crayon (masculine noun)
Yes, trousse is a feminine noun in french. We can use the articles "une" or "la"
a and an are spelled 'un' or 'une' in French. Use 'un' with masculine nouns, and 'une' with feminine ones.
une armure (feminine)
une table pour un, une table pour une personne
"une cave à vin" (une cave is a cellar in French, but une 'cave à vin' is a wine refrigerator. Another name, much less in use, is 'une armoire à vin'
un for a masculine noun (un homme, un avion, un chat) une for feminine noun (une femme, une table, une chatte)
une and la are feminine articles in French. 'une' is translated by 'a': une voiture = a car (that could be any car); 'la' is a definite article, translated by 'the'. La voiture = the car (you know what exact car we are speaking of)
an housewife is 'une femme au foyer' in French. The advertising world or sociologist may use 'une ménagère'.
The French use un or une in place of the English word a(n). It literally means "one" - so when you say "an apple" in French - une pomme - literally means "one apple".
A friend is un ami (masc.), une amie (fem.) in French. You may also use un / une camarade.
some thing drawn with a crayon.......i wouldnt use crayon use colored pencils
The French use the words "un/une baby-sitter" as borrowed from English.