In English, the French phrase il y a du brouillard means "there is fog" or "it is foggy".
It is equivalent to both "he" and "it" depending on its context.
"It's cloudy" and "It's overcast" are English equivalents of the French phrase Il fait des nuages. The declarative statement translates literally as "It is making some clouds" in English. The pronunciation will be "eel feh dey nwazh" in French.
The French equivalent is 'il pleut des cordes', meaning literally 'it is raining ropes'.
he has brown eyes : il a des yeux bruns
Vous devez is French for 'you have'. This is the 2nd person plural for the verb "devoir".
il = it y = there a = has des = of il y a des = it there has of so maybe: there are
"Y a des Français ici" is informal French for "Il y a des Français ici," which means "There are French people here."
Il a les cheveux gris is how you say he has grey hair........
Il a des fleurs rouges in French means "He has some red flowers" in English.
il y a des éclairs mean: there are lightnings / thunderbolts
il y a des jeux
il a des chaussures noires
Il bredouille means he speaks in a way that is difficult to understand - des vanties is meaningless
to wear glasses is 'porter des lunettes' in French.
FRENCH- il est TRANSLATION IN ENGLISH- "it is" or "he is"
"He lives of benefits" is "il vit des allocations" in French.
Il y aura des danses - on dansera