the seasons
The phrase "les deux" is a phrase that comes from the French language. The French phrase, "les deux" translates from French to English to the phrase "the two".
The young students
The seasons are a beautiful garden.
Les saisons
"Roots" or "the roots" are French equivalents of the French phrase "les racines."Specifically, the feminine/masculine plural definite article "les" means "the." The feminine noun "racines" means "roots." The pronunciation is "leh rah-seen."
"Les mange" does not have a direct meaning in French. "Les" is a plural article meaning "the" and "mange" is the third person singular present tense of "manger", which means "to eat". However, "les mange" does not form a grammatically correct phrase or sentence in French.
The phrase 'les pages jaunes' is the French for 'yellow pages'. The 'yellow pages' are a telephone directory of businesses arranged by category rather than purely alphabetically.
"The snails" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase les escargots. The pronunciation of the masculine plural phrase will be "ley-zeh-skar-go" in French.
"The bells" is an English equivalent of the French phrase les cloches.Specifically, the feminine/masculine plural definite article les means "the". The feminine noun clochestranslates as "bells". The pronunciation will be "ley klohsh" in French.
"The beds" is an English equivalent of the French phrase les lits.Specifically, the feminine/masculine plural definite article les means "the". The masculine noun litstranslates as "beds". The pronunciation will be "ley lee" in French.
"Through the..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase par les... .Specifically, the preposition par means "by, through." The feminine/masculine definite article les translates as "the." The pronunciation will be "pahr ley" in French.
"Les pierres" is a French term that translates to "the stones" in English.