"The kings" is an English equivalent of "lesrois."
The plural definite article "les" means "the." The plural form of the masculine noun "rois" means "kings." The plural indefinite article is "des" ("some").
The pronunciation is "leh rwah."
"The king" is an English equivalent of "leroi."
The masculine singular definite article "le" means "the." The singular form of the masculine noun "roi" means "king." The indefinite article would be "un" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "luh rwah."
'je suis le roi' means I am the king in French.
Je suis le roi.
king = le roi kings = les rois
All hail to the king is 'tous saluent le roi' in French.
Le roy means 'the king'. The spelling is now 'le roi', but the 'y' still survives in royal, royauté, royaliste.
Roi means 'king'
'je suis le roi' means I am the king in French.
Vive le roi! in French is pronounced "veev luh wah" and means "Long live the king!" in English.
Roi. Or Le Roi , the King. in plural ( Les Rois)
le roi
In French, "Heil the King" would be translated as "Vive le Roi."
le Roi
le roi
"Zhuh swee luh wa" is a way to pronounce the French phrase Je suis le roi! The declaration translates literally as "I am the king!" or "I'm the king!" in English. It also will be translated as "I am king!" or "I'm king!" since French employs definite articles where English does and does not use "the."
"King" in French is "roi."
Le Roi Lion. To refer to the sequels of this movie, you would say, "Le Roi Lion 2."
Vous êtes le roi