Sweets, as in candy, would be 'des bonbons'.
In French, the word "sweets" is translated as "les sucreries," which is considered feminine. This is because "sucreries" is a plural noun that is preceded by the feminine article "les." In French, nouns can be either masculine or feminine, and the gender of the noun affects the articles and adjectives used with it.
Bonbon is the French word for Candies ans sweets. There could be gelatin in some of them - the elastic ones.
'rare' is the maori word for sweets.
Bons-bons.
The French people probably don't like pastries and sweets any more than any other countries. It's a stereotype.
candy
Crepes and I don't know the rest
... which means that I rarely eat sweets' is translated '... ce qui veut dire que je mange rarement des bonbons' in French.
You say "J'ai acheté des bonbons" in French. "J'ai" means "I have," "acheté" means "bought," and "des bonbons" translates to "some sweets" or "candies."
The noun 'sweets' is the plural form of the noun 'sweet', a word for a food having a high sugar content; a word for a thing (things).
The noun 'sweets' is the plural form of the noun 'sweet', a word for a food having a high sugar content; a word for a thing (things).
La maison de Doux.