"The big blue" is an English equivalent of the French phrase le gran bleu.
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article lemeans "the." The masculine adjective gran means "big, great." The masculine adjective/noun bleu means "blue."
The pronunciation will be "luh graw bluh" in French.
Bleu et vert is French and means blue and green.
"mon cahier d'exercice bleu" means "my blue exercise book" (or workbook).
La couleur préférée est bleu! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "Favorite color is blue!" The declaration translates literally as "The preferred color is blue" since French employs definite articles -- in this case, la -- even where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "la koo-lur prey-fey-rey bluh" in French.
Since the French colours are RED, WHITE and BLUE in Enlgish, they are ROUGE (red), BLANC(white) and BLEU(blue)
Bleu foncé
"Light blue" is an English equivalent of the French phrase bleu clair. The pronunciation of the masculine singular adjective will be "bluh klehr" in French.
"Blue cheese cooked quickly over high heat" is an English equivalent of the French phrase sauté bleu. The masculine singular phrase most famously references a choice topping for salmon. The pronunciation will be "so-tey bluh" in French.
"Of the so blue country" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase du pays aussi bleu. The pronunciation of the prepositional phrase -- which also translates literally as "of the blue country too" -- will be "dyoo pa-ee o-see bluh" in French.
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."
Bleu (masc.) Bleue (fem.)
argile, english translation
"bleu ciel" means "sky blue" in French.
Translation: crabe bleu
Bleu et vert is French and means blue and green.
"Les Bleu" is the name in translation.....The Blues YES PLEASE
"Sacred blue" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase sacrebleu.Specifically, the word combines the adjectives sacre ("sacred") and bleu ("blue"). The phrase nevertheless functions somewhat as a curse which translates more politely as "my God!" or "zounds!" It references the "sacred blue" dress of Mary, mother of Jesus of Nazareth (ca. 7-2 B.C.-A.D. 30-36).
"mon cahier d'exercice bleu" means "my blue exercise book" (or workbook).