Ce sera en noir is a French equivalent of the English phrase "It will be black."
Specifically, the masculine demonstrative pronoun cemeans "it, that, this." The verb sera means "(He/she/it) will be." The masculine adjective noir means "black."
The pronunciation is "suh srah aw nwahr."
Poivrier noir is a French equivalent of the English phrase "black pepper" (Piper nigrum).Specifically, the French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article le means "the." The masculine adjective noir means "black."The pronunciation is "pwah-vryeh nwahr."
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
Noir et bleu is a French equivalent of the English phrase "black and blue."Specifically, the masculine adjective noir means "black." The conjunction et means "and." The masculine adjective bleu means "blue."The pronunciation is "nwah-reh bluh."
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".
"Black pepper" is an English equivalent of the French phrase poivrier noir (Piper nigrum).Specifically, the French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article le means "the." The masculine adjective noir means "black."The pronunciation is "pwah-vryeh nwahr."
"Black widow" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase veuve noire. The pronunciation of the feminine singular phrase -- which references a super-venomous spider (Latrodectus spp) scientifically and a man-killing woman socially -- will be "vuhv nwar" in French.
"Black and curly" is an English equivalent of the French masculine singular phrase noirs et frisés. The pronunciation will be "nwa-rey free-zey" 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.
"The black child" is an English equivalent of the French phrase L'enfant noir.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article le* can be translated as "the" in English. The masculine noun enfant may be rendered as "child" in English. The masculine adjective noir means "black" in English.The pronunciation will be "law-faw nwahr" in French.*The vowel e drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a noun which begins with a vowel.
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.