"Sir," "Mister" or "Gentleman" may be English equivalents of the French word monsieur.
Specifically, the French word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article le means "the." Its singular indefinite article un means "a, one."
The pronunciation is "muh-syuhr."
'Monsieur'
"Gentleman," "Mister" and "sir" are English equivalents of the French word monsieur. The masculine singular noun literally translates as "my lord" in English. The pronunciation will be "muh-syuhr" in French.
The French words 'Bonjour monsieur' mean 'hello sir' in English.
"Grilled cheese and ham sandwich" and "toasted cheese and ham sandwich" are English equivalents of the French word croque-monsieur. The masculine singular combination noun translates literally as "crunch-mister" in English. The pronunciation will be "kruhk-muh-syuhr" in French.
Mister
"Not today, sir!" in English is Pas aujourd'hui, Monsieur! in French.
Monsieur is a French equivalent of the English word "sir."Specifically, the word functions as a masculine noun in its singular form. It also means "gentleman, Mister, Mr." Whatever the meaning, the pronunciation will be "muh-syuh" in French.
"A gentleman" is one English equivalent of the French phrase un monsieur.Specifically, the masculine word un means "a, an" as a singular indefinite article and "one" as a number. The masculine noun monsieur translates as "gentleman, mister, Mr., sir." The pronunciation will be "eh muh-syuh" in French.
Monsieur (M.)
Monsieur
"Mister Lion" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Monsieur Lion. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "Gentleman (My lord, Sir) Lion" in English. The pronunciation will be "muh-syuhr lee-o" in French.
The title for a French man is "Monsieur" which is the equivalent of "Mr." in English.