Patiner is a verb. You don't put any article in front of it.
Irez vous patiner? Iras tu patiner? If you mean will you go skating with me/us Viendrez vous patiner? Viens tu patiner (usually tu viens patiner,)
'la' is the definite (feminine, singular) article in French
Patinage
The definite article for "lycée" in French is "le" for masculine nouns and "la" for feminine nouns.
The correct definite article for the French word "papier" is "le." Therefore, it is "le papier," which means "the paper" in English.
It isfemininegender.In France a "definite article" is not used, but in Canada it is.
patiner faire du patin (à glace, à roulettes)
"Roi" is a French equivalent of "king."The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "rwah."
The is the definite article.
The French definite article is le for masculine singular nouns, la for feminine singular nouns, and les for plural nouns. Before a vowel (or mute h) the singular forms are spelled l' and attached to the following word.All of these are equivalent to the English definite article "the," although usage isn't identical in the two languages; French requires the definite article more often than English does: J'aime le sport versus "I love sports."The definite article merges with a preceding preposition as follows:de + le = dude + les = desà + le = auà + les = aux
The word "sac" in French is masculine. So, it uses masculine definite article "le" and indefinite article "un".
In French, "chapeau" is masculine. However, you can tell if a French noun is feminine if it is preceded by the definite article "la" or the indefinite article "une".