If you are using 'la' as a pronoun in 'la lis' then 'la lis' can be translated to an informal way of saying 'read it' as a teacher may say to a student.
Other than that 'la lis' would mean lily. La lys is sometimes used to say the same thing I believe.
la fleur de lys - lily of the valley (it was the emblem of the French Kings)
Not anymore. Note that Lis can also be written Lys
'Lily' is an English equivalent of 'lys' [Liliumspp].The masculine nouns 'lys' and 'lis' mean 'lily'. They each have as their singular definite article 'le'['the']. They each have as their singular indefinite article 'un' ['a, one'].But whatever the spelling, each is pronounced 'lees'.
The Fleur de Lis/Lys seems to be associated more with the Virgin Mary, rather than with Jesus Christ. This comes from the conversion of Clovis in 493, when an apparation of the Virgin Mary made a gift of a Fleur de Lis/Lys at his baptism ceremony. There are a lot more legends/folklore tying the Fleur de Lis/Lys to the Virgin Mary. Apart from this one, The three petals of the heraldic design of the Fleur de Lis/Lys reflect a widespread association with the Holy Trinity, a tradition going back to 14th century France.
Lily is spelled the same in French. You are probably llooking forFleur-de-lis
fluer d Lis symbOL??? I don't have a clue what you are referring to.
A lily is 'un lys' (masc.) in French.
The fleur-de-lis (also spelled fleur-de-lys; plural fleurs-de-lis or -lys; an archaic spelling is fleur-de-luce) is used in heraldry, where it is particularly associated with the French monarchy (see King of France). Fleur-de-luce also means Flower of Light. Lucy/Luce means light. The name, anglicized, means "lily flower", and the symbol is in fact a stylized Iris pseudacorus L.
un lys is the flower called a lily in English.
French: la lumière Spanish: la luz Italian: luce German: Licht Russian: света Hebrew: ōr (אור) Danish: lys
One of the French symbols is the fleur-de-lys.
It's called a "fleur de lis" or "Fleur de lys" (pronounced - floor dah lee) and is a French emblem often used by various groups of "holy" knights and musketeers throughout their history.