il fait gris means : a Gray
Il fais grismeans It is grey. Il meaning it. Fais meaning Is. And Gris meaning grey.
Il y a du brouillard - il fait gris et humide
In French, "Le temps est nuageux", "le ciel est nuageux" mean that "it's cloudy". 'Il fait nuageux' is grammatically correct but this is not a sentence a native speaker would use.Native speakers would use "Il fait gris" (It's grey) - notice that this form may sound incorrect but is in fact coming from "Il fait un temps gris" (which would sound strange for the natives).
"Il fait quoi?" is French for "What is he doing?" or "he does what?".
"Il fait quoi?" is French for "What is he doing?" or "he does what?".
Without knowing the prefix, fait could be the past participle or from the present tense. as follows, using the spelling fait present, il fait. Future il fera. Imperfect il faisait. Subjunctive il fasse, Conditional il ferait, Past participle fait. The word means to do or to make in French. So although you question may need clarification, the word could mean 'did' and it could mean 'does' does a fait mean did in french?
Il fait du soleil means "it is sunny" in French.
Il fait froid means it is cold; used in French when referring to the weather.
le ciel est nuageux > the sky is cloudy (nuage = cloud) un temps neigeux > a snowy weather (neige = snow) We can say 'il fait froid / il fait chaud / il fait du soleil' (it is cold / hot / sunny) but 'il fait neigeux / il fait nuageux' are not used in speech. Not that they are not correct, but that would be odd to say.
First of all, it's "il fait chaud" Il fait chaud means it is hot.
"il fait sombre" means "it's dark" when translated from French to English
Il fait lourd means that the weather is muggy.Weather conditions are often described in French by the phrase il fait "it does; it makes" plus an adjective. For example,il fait beau "the weather is beautiful"il fait froid "the weather is cold"il fait chaud "the weather is hot"Il fait lourd thus means "the weather is heavy", which describes not "heavy weather" in the sense of stormy conditions at sea, but rather an oppressive combination of heat and humidity.