La means the and it is feminin which means it works for things that are female
Le means the and it is masculin which means it works for male things
'le' and 'la' are the two French words which correspond to the English word 'the'. 'le stylo' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a biro) 'la plume' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a fountain-pen) French needs two words for 'the' because its nouns all have grammatical gender (a feature which is absent in English). le stylo, le soleil, le violon :: the pen, the sun, the violin but la plume, la lune, la guimbarde :: the pen, the moon, the jawharp When 'le' or 'la' precede a word that begins with a vowel, they shorten to 'l' ''l'alouette' 'the lark' (NOT la alouette); 'l'opposite' 'the opposite' (NOT le opposite). So there is really no difference between 'l' and 'le' in French. 'Le' becomes 'l' when the next letter is a vowel.
"Les" and "Le" are French words, specifically the plural and singular for the English word the."Las" and "La" are Spanish words. "Las" is feminine plural and "La" is feminine singular, both signifying the English word the.
le
Le concombre
Le is for masculine words, la is for feminine words.
In French, "mango" is masculine, so it is "le mangue."
The French word for "yak", a cow-like animal found in Tibet and Mongolia, begins with the letter Y. In French, it is spelled "yak" or "yack."
Le camping in French language.
French article: le [masculine]/la[feminine]= English article: the
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
"la province"
Le boulanger is 'the baker' in French. The bakery is 'la boulangerie'.