You mean what are they......
for one guy you say Il
for one girl you say Elle
for a group for girls you say Elles
for a group of girls with only one or more guys in it you would say Ils
for just a group of guys you would say Ils
For a group of guys with one girl you would still say Ils
French has grammatical gender, where nouns are either masculine or feminine. This distinction dates back to Latin and has been carried over into French. The gender of nouns in French can sometimes seem arbitrary and does not always correspond to biological gender.
The French word for African is "Africain" when used for masculine and "Africaine" when used for feminine.
Roughly 60% of French words are masculine, while the remaining 40% are feminine.
masculine
Douce is feminine. The masculine is 'doux'.
La salade is feminine
The French word for African is "Africain" when used for masculine and "Africaine" when used for feminine.
Bicyclette is feminine. In words ending in "ette" in French, are feminine.
In French, you can often identify feminine words by the presence of the suffixes such as -e, -ion, -tion, -té, -elle, -ude, etc. However, the best way to learn the gender of a word is to memorize it along with the vocabulary.
Feminine
une dent is a feminine noun in French.
Words ending '-ion' are always feminine.
In French, adjectives and articles must agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they modify. This means that the ending of the word may change to match the noun's gender. For example, "petit" becomes "petite" for feminine nouns. Verbs may also change according to the gender of the subject in some tenses.
masculine
The French word "la" is a feminine article used before feminine nouns.
feminine
masculine
Feminine