La blanchisserie (fem.)
In French, "mango" is masculine, so it is "le mangue."
the '' l' '' means the but '' le '' and '' la '' do aswell
'le' and 'la' are the two French words which correspond to the English word 'the'. 'le stylo' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a biro) 'la plume' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a fountain-pen) French needs two words for 'the' because its nouns all have grammatical gender (a feature which is absent in English). le stylo, le soleil, le violon :: the pen, the sun, the violin but la plume, la lune, la guimbarde :: the pen, the moon, the jawharp When 'le' or 'la' precede a word that begins with a vowel, they shorten to 'l' ''l'alouette' 'the lark' (NOT la alouette); 'l'opposite' 'the opposite' (NOT le opposite). So there is really no difference between 'l' and 'le' in French. 'Le' becomes 'l' when the next letter is a vowel.
le, la, l' you put them unfront of nouns :)
This isn't quite correct french, because le or la before a vowel becomes l'. L'ananas means the pineapple.
L' irlande Island L' italie Italy L' espagne Spain La grèce Greece La pologne Poland L' allemagne Germany La suede Sweden Le Portugal Portugal Le Luxembourg L' autriche Austria La norvège L' écosse Scotland L' angleterre England La Suisse Switzerland La tschechoslovaquie Chek Le pays de galles Wales La France France Les pays - bas Holland La belgique Belgium Le danemark Denmark L' irlande du nord North island Is this enough?/
the has no gender in french considering you say the girl or the boy in English it would be LA fille ou LE garçon in french
there are 4 ways of writing "the".they are le,la,les and l'
Le(m) La(f) l'(words begin with dowel)
Le Tricolore, more properly Le Drapeau Tricolore. La Marseillaise is the national anthem; l'Hexagone is the shape of the country.
The "L" stands for either "La" or "Le" they are articles, the same as "the" in English. When French word begins with a consonant, the word "La" or "Le" is used in full, like "Le table" or "La crayon". But when a French word begins with a vowel, the vowel is elided with the vowel of the article, like in "L'eglise" or "L'orange".
L',* la, le, and les are French words which function as equivalents of the English word "the" and serve as pronouns. The respective pronunciations in French will be "la" ("her, it" "the"), "luh" ("him, it," "the"), and "ley" ("them," "the").*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a word which begins with a vowel. It represents either la or le.