It depends on how this question is read.
If it is asking how to pronounce the French word "y", meaning "there" (like "nous y allons"), it is pronounced like "ee" in the English word "bee".
If it is using "y" as "text-speak" to represent the English word "why", the French word for this is "pourqoui". In French "text-speak", "pk" or "pq" is usually used to represent "pourqoui".
In French, the letter "y" is pronounced like the English word "ee-grec" or "i-grec".
why? - pourquoi?
You can say "Dans le village, il y a" in French.
To say "What is there in your town?" in French, you would say "Qu'est-ce qu'il y a dans ta ville?"
You can say "il y a le silence" in French to mean "there is silence."
"Here we are" in French is "Nous y voilร ".
You should say Allons-y, which literally means "Let's go there" or "Let's go to it". In French grammar, the verb "aller" needs a place or verb to follow it. The "y" is the French pronoun for "there", so it fills the "place requirement".
You can say "Dans le village, il y a" in French.
il y avait ...
Il y a, and it means there is or there are.
on y VA
"Est-ce que quelqu'un ici est franรงais?"
You can say "il y a le silence" in French to mean "there is silence."
"Here we are" in French is "Nous y voilร ".
Il y a trois ....
Il y avait...
including - y compris
on y va
You can say "Je vais y aller demain" in French.