"King" is an English equivalent of "roi."
The French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "le" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").
The pronunciation is "rwah."
'Rois' in french is the plural for king. 'Les rois' is 'the kings' and 'le roi' is 'the king'.
Epiphany: La fête des Rois, or le jour des Rois is the French name for the Epiphany (the three Wise Men visiting the new-born Jesus).
a piece of bean, or these ceramic things they have in the galletes des rois
Roi. Or Le Roi , the King. in plural ( Les Rois)
in english, it means "the final arguments of kings" It's a latin sentence on the royal french cannon! in french : l'ultime argument des rois
The cake eaten for epiphany is "la galette des Rois". Les Rois, or "les rois mages" are the Magi (or Wise Men) in French.
The cake eaten for epiphany is "la galette des Rois". Les Rois, or "les rois mages" are the Magi (or Wise Men) in French.
"Gâteau des Rois"
Les trois rois.
The 6th of January is the Epiphany. The French eat the "galette des rois" (the Kings' cake) named after "les Rois Mages" (the magi or Wise Men in English). The tradition is that the youngest member of the family should get under the table and call the name for each part of the cake. The one who gets "la fève" (a lucky charm) is crowned as the King or the Queen by the others. This is called "tirer les rois".
The French call the Three Wise Men "the Magi Kings" (in French: les Rois Mages). The Epiphany is most often called "la fête des Rois", and the traditional cake is "la galette des Rois" (the Kings' cake). Their names were supposedly Gaspard, Melchior, and Balthazar.
king = le roi kings = les rois