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.
"je"
The word "her" in French is translated as "son" when referring to a feminine possessive pronoun and as "elle" when referring to the third person singular pronoun.
"Qui" in French means "who" in English. It is an interrogative pronoun used to ask about a person.
"Nothing" is an English equivalent of the French word "rien."Specifically, the French word is an indefinite pronoun. But it also can be a masculine noun. But either way, the meaning and the pronunciation are the same: "ryeh."
Ils in French is "they" in English.
The pronoun 'that' is a demonstrative pronoun; a word to indicate, to show, to point to. The pronoun 'that' is also a relative pronoun; a word that introduces a relative clause. Examples:Demonstrative pronoun: That is my favorite movie.Relative pronoun: This is the movie that I like.The word 'that' is also and adjective, an adverb, and a conjunction.
"Son" is a Possessive Pronoun. It means "his" or "her"
Une is a pronoun. The English equivalent is a.
"Who" is an English equivalent of the French word qui. The pronoun in question also translates as "that," "which," "whom" or "whose" according to context and after prepositions. The pronunciation will be "kee" in French.
The French word for month is mois (same spelling in the plural). It is pronounced the same as the pronoun moi--"mwah".
'aider' is to help in French. t' stands for 'toi', the pronoun for you (singular)
"Ouch!" is an English equivalent of the French word "aïe."Specifically, the French word is a common exclamation of pain. But it also can be used to express the emotional pain of worry, such as in "Oh dear, Oh no!" The pronunciation is "eye."**The sound is similar to that in the English personal pronoun "I."