"Le Lycée Blacon" is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Blacon High School."
Specifically, the masculine masculine singular definite article "le" means "the." The noun "lycée" means "secondary school, high school" The pronunciation is "luh lee-seh blah-koh."
"The school" is an English equivalent of the French phrase l'école. The feminine singular phrase also translates as "school (of thought)" and "schooling" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "ley-kol" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
"Nursery school" and "preschool" are English equivalents of the French phrase école maternelle. The feminine singular phrase translates literally as "maternal school" in English. The pronunciation will be "ey-kol ma-ter-nel" in Alsatian French.
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
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".
Matières préférées is a French equivalent of the English phrase "favorite school subjects." The feminine plural phrase may be preceded immediately by the feminine plural les since French employs definite articles even when English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ley) ma-tyer prey-fey-rey" in French.
The phrase 'ecoles de conduite' is from the French language. When translated to English it means 'driving school'. One might use the phrase when learning how to drive in France.
"How's school going?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Comment ça va l'école? The question translates literally as "How does that go, the school?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh-maw sa va ley-kol" in French.
"He is..." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Il est... . The phrase also translates literally as "It is..." in English. The pronunciation will be "ee-ley" in French.
"Only" is an English equivalent of the French phrase ne...que. The adverbial phrase translates literally as "not...that" in English. The pronunciation will be "nuh kuh" in French.
Le fils is a French equivalent of the English phrase "the son." The masculine singular phrase also translates as "the boy" in English. The pronunciation will be luh fees" in French.
"We are... ." is an English equivalent of the incomplete French phrase Nous sommes... . The phrase also translates literally as "We're..." in English. The pronunciation will be "noo suhm" in French.
"A high school" is one English equivalent of the French phrase un lycée.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article and number un respectively mean "a" and "one". The masculine noun lycée translates as "high school, secondary school" in the United States of America. The pronunciation will be "eh lee-say" in French.