"The place" is an English equivalent of the French phrase le lieu.
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article lemeans "the." The masculine noun lieu means "location, place, site." The pronunciation will be "luh lyuh" in French.
"Birthplace" is an English equivalent of the French phrase lieu de naissance.Specifically, the masculine noun lieu is "place". The preposition de means "of". The feminine noun naissancetranslates as "birth".The pronunciation will be "lyuh duh neh-sawnss" in French.
In French, yes. In English, no, it's almost always used in the phrase "in lieu of".
The French phrase "pourquoi aimez-vous ce lieu?" translates to "why do you like this place?" in English.
Loo (English slang for toilet) is pronounced the same as the word lieu, part of the phrase in lieu of (instead of). In French, lieu means "location."
There is no such word in English.Perhaps the word you're looking for is lieu, as in the phrase "in lieu of." This word is French, and it means "place."
In French the word is a simple noun meaning place or location, but the English expression tends to be limited to the half-translated phrase "in lieu of"*, meaning "instead of" or "in place of". En français, au lieu de
"Lieu" in French delivery documents means "location" or "place" where the delivery is to be made. It refers to the specific address or destination where the package or goods are being delivered.
That is the correct spelling of "lieu" -- used in the phrase "in lieu of" meaning "instead of."
The noun lieu is uncountable. The plural form of lieu is also lieu.
Date of birth. PLACE of birth (lieu = place, not date)
The word "lieu" is pronounced as "loo" in English.
"Name the other place that the girl visited" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Nommez l'autre lieu que la fille a visité. The imperative statement also translates as "Name the other site that the daughter (maid) visited" according to context in English. The pronunciation will be "NOM-mey lot lyuh kuh la fee a vee-zee-tey" in northern French and "NOM-mey lo-truh lyuh kuh la fee-yuh a vee-zee-tey" in southern French.