Leur has two primary translations: either "their" or "them" as an indirect object.
For example:
Je suis leur soeur = I am their sister.
Je leur ai dit de t'inviter = I told them to invite you.
It Depends here is a list there is leur and then if it is plural it is leurs
Il leur donne du charbon. I don't know if "he gives them coal" is a English idiom.
une ceinture j'ai dit aux enfants de mettre leur ceinture de sécurité = I told the children to buckle their safety belt
Women [that are] crazy with their bodies.
Réveillez-vous!=Telling someone to wake up. Nous nous réveillons=We wake up. Ils leur réveillent=They wake up.
leur
French for yours is leur.
'de leur voisin' means 'of their neighbour' in French.
"quoi à leur sujet" is "what about them" in French.
leur(s)
leur, leurs
their sister -> leur sœur
Leur is a possessive (their) in French, used in both masculine and feminine: (si j'avais leur age, je ... > if I were their age, I ... La leur means 'theirs' : je n'ai pas ma voiture, je vais prendre la leur > I don't have my car, I will take theirs The possessed object is a feminine noun. For masculine nouns, you would use 'le leur'
Translation: Leur père
Their name is ... = "leur nom est ..."
"Him and them" is an English equivalent of the French phrase lui et leur. The masculine phrase also translates incompletely into English as "him and their... ." The pronunciation will be "lwee ey luhr" in French.
It Depends here is a list there is leur and then if it is plural it is leurs