There are numerous French words ending in ée - with an accent mark on the first e: une journée (the span of a day), une cuillerée (a spoonful), etc..., but I am unable to find a French word containing a double e and no accent mark.
"I" in French is pronounced as "ee" like in the English word "see."
The French word "idole" is pronounced as "ee-dohl" in English.
iciici (pronounced ee-see)
The word for "stripey" in French is "rayé."
Italienne in the feminine and italien in the masculine are French equivalents of the English word "Italian".Specifically, the word is an adjective in its singular form. The feminine form is pronounced "ee-tah-lyehn". The masculine equivalent is pronounced "ee-tah-lyah" in French.
It is idiote pronounced ee-dyoh-t:)
The word is spelled exactly the same, but pronounced 'or-ee-bleh'
Illinois is already a French word. It is pronounced Ill-in-nwa.
The French word for 'July' is 'Juillet'. To pronounce July in French you say 'zhwee-eh'.
Kafkaïenne in the feminine and kafkaïen in the masculine are French equivalents of the English word "Kafkaesque".Specifically, the word is an adjective in its singular form. The feminine singular form is pronounced "kahf-kah-ee-ah". The masculine form is pronounced "kahf-kah-ee-ehn" in French.
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".
Paa-ru-ploo-ee "Paa" rhymes with "baa" (the sound a sheep makes). "Ru" has the same sound as the first syllable of "rudder" without the "d" "Ploo" rhymes with "flu". "Ee" is the vowel in the word "see".