L' and le - both of which mean "the" in English -- are the articles which are used with the French word avion. The choice depends upon whether the article directly comes before the masculine singular noun - in the first case - or has an intervening word - such as an adjective or number, in the second instance. The pronunciation will be "a-vyo" in French.
Par avion. (by airplane, used on airmail)
avion
Avion.
animal, avion, automobile
'un avion' is a plane. Avion is not a Spanish word, but a (recent) French word modelled after the Latin 'avis' meaning bird.
plane un avion
an airplane is called 'un avion' in French. The old word 'aéroplane' isn't used any more.
The word that is used in Modern Foreign Languages (MFL) now'a days is Un Avion which is masculin.
The Spanish word, avion, is Bird in English.
The French word for 'things' is choses. It's a feminine gender noun in the plural. The singular form is 'chose'. The feminine definite article 'les' is used with the word, in the construction 'les choses', to mean 'the things'. The feminine indefinite article 'des' is used with the word, in the construction 'des choses', to mean 'some things'.
Masculine
"Spring" is an English equivalent of the French word printemps.Specifically, the French word is a masculine noun. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article le("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "preh-taw" in French.