"Did it rain?" and "Was it pleasing?" are English equivalents of the French phrase A-t-il plu? Context makes clear which interpretation suits. The pronunciation will be "a-teel plyoo" in French.
J'espère que le repas t'a plu! and J'espère que le repas vous a plu! are French equivalents of the English phrase "Hope you had an enjoyable meal!" in English. Context makes clear whether one "you" (case 1) or two or more "you all" (example 2) suits for "I hope that the meal pleased you!" The respective pronunciations will be "zheh-sper kuh luh ruh-pa ta plyoo" and "zheh-sper kuh luh ruh-pa voo-za plyoo" in French.
Ami and amie are French equivalents of the English word "friend." Context makes clear whether a female (case 2) or a male (example 1) suits. The pronunciation will be "a-mee" in French.
il ne jamais plu pas
'il a plu tout le week-end'
"je suis content(e) que cela t'aie plu"
the prefix plu means more
ça va ! à plus. I'm okay, see you later.
To say "it rained a lot" in French, you would say "Il a beaucoup plu."
"plu". Example: "il a plu ce matin" (it rained this morning)
The word "leaves" in French is spelled "feuilles."
he goes to PLU.
plum or plump