The French word "rue" (feminine noun) means "street" in English.
The English words man/men are "homme/hommes" in French.
"Rue" means "street."
men is translated "les hommes" in French.
"Brave men" is an English equivalent of the French word mans. The pronunciation of the masculine noun -- which abbreviates the name of the ancient Celtic tribe Cenomani (in what is now a northeastern French city on the Sarthe River) -- will be a nasalized "maw" in French.
'Men.'
It's French for the dream of all men
due uomini
uomini divini
bei uomini
Pour les hommes seulement
"The days of the week are..." is a literal English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Les jours de la semaine sont... . The pronunciation will be "ley zhoor duh la suh-men so" in French.
"Of the men," "some men," and "the men's" are just three English equivalents of the French phrase des hommes.Specifically, the word des functions as a partitive or a possessive preposition. It means "of the" -- from the combination of the preposition de ("of") and the feminine/masculine definite plural article les ("the") -- or "some" according to context. The masculine noun hommes translates as "males, men." Regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation will be "dey zuhm" in French.
"Two handsome men" in English means due bellissimi uominiin Italian.
J'aime les hommes is a French equivalent of the English phrase "I love men."Specifically, the subject pronoun je* is "I." The present indicative verb aime means "(I) am loving, do love, love." The masculine plural definite article lesmeans "the." The masculine noun hommes translates as "men."The pronunciation will be "zheh ley-zuhm" in French.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.