"The woman (of) sorrows" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase la femme douleurs. The pronunciation of the truncated phrase -- which typically appears as Notre Dame des Sept Douleurs ("Our Lady of Seven Sorrows") and which references the seven griefs in the life of Our Lady Mary (18 B.C.? - A.D. 41?), mother of Jesus of Nazareth (7 B.C.? - A.D. 33?) -- will be "la fahm doo-luhr" in French.
Pour femme in French means "for (a) woman" in English.
La femme fatale in French means "the fatal woman" in English.
le belle femme = the beautiful woman
H/F, which stands for Homme ou Femme in French, is "Man or woman" in English.
"Ugly woman" is an English equivalent of the French phrase femme laide. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun and adjective -- which translate literally as "woman ugly" -- will be "fahm lehd" in French.
"The woman" is an English equivalent of the French phrase la femme. The feminine singular phrase also translates loosely as "partner," "spouse" or "wife" in special English contexts. The pronunciation will be "la fahm" in French.
what is his wife's health
"Man's and woman's" is an English equivalent of the French phrase d'homme et de femme. The prepositional phrase translates literally into English as "of man and of woman." The pronunciation will be "duh-mey duh fam" in French.
"Iron woman" is an English equivalent of the French phrase femme de fer. The singular phrase translates literally as "woman of iron" in English. The pronunciation will be "fahmd fer" in northern French and "fa-muh duh fer" in southern French.
"That's a (or one) lethal woman!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase C'est une femme fatale! The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase will be "sey-tyoon fahm fa-tal" in French.
sage-femme
You can say "ma femme" in French to refer to "my woman."