The plural of lei is leis.
The plural of lei is lei. The same word is used for both singular and plural forms.
The plural form of the Hawaii word "lei" is "lei." The word remains the same whether singular or plural.
The singular noun is lei, the plural form is leis.
In Italian, "lei" is pronounced as "lay."
The word "lay" is pronounced the same as the word "lei." They are homophones.
"Lei Lani" is a Hawaiian name that means "heavenly lei" or "royal lei." It combines the word "lei," which is a garland of flowers or leaves, with "lani," which means "heaven" or "sky." The name conveys a sense of beauty, royalty, and celestial essence.
The plural form of the Hawaii word "lei" is "lei." The word remains the same whether singular or plural.
The singular noun is lei, the plural form is leis.
Familiar: tu, polite: lei, plural: voi
Tu and Lei in the singular and vi and Loro in the plural are Italian equivalents of the English word "you".Specifically, the possessive singular personal pronoun tuand the possessive plural vi mean "(informal singular) you" and "(informal plural) you all". The possessive singular personal pronoun Lei and the possessive plural Loro translate as "(formal singular) you" and "(formal plural) you, you all". The pronunciations will be "too" and "vee" in terms of the informal forms and "LEH-ee" and "LO-ro" in terms of the formal.
not sure if it's lei lei or Le Le but good I think
In Italian, "lei" is pronounced as "lay."
lei.
Lei Liang was born in 1972.
That would be "ha." The following would probably also be helpful: I have: io ho. You have: tu hai. S/he has: lui/lei ha. We have; noi abbiamo. You (plural) have: voi avete. They have: loro hanno. There is also a convention where you use lei as a polite form of the English "you." It is pronounced the same way, but spelled Lei. In conversation, it's understood that people are using this when they meet you for the first time and are calling you Lei. Voi is the plural, and tu is usually reserved for people you know very well--close friends and family. Also, since verb endings denote who is speaking (doing, etc.) in Italian, quite often subjects are left out, particularly in conversation. Hopes this helps.
A te and a Lei in the singular and a voi and a Loro in the plural are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "to you." The respective pronunciations of the prepositional phrases in Italian will be "a tey" for the informal singular "you," "a leh-ee" for the formal singular "you," "a voy" in the informal plural "you all," and "a LO-ro" in the formal plural "you all."
Keeani Lei was born on March 16, 1981, in Panama.
Wen Lei has written: 'Lei Wen shi wen ji'