'il' is translated 'he' in English.
"il" is the personal pronoun 'he' in English.
1) "He is late", if the pronoun "il" refers back to a person, or, 2) "it is late", if "il" refers back to a thing.
"il" is a masculine pronoun, standing for "he". The feminine pronoun (for "she") is "elle".
"He would like" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il voudrait.Specifically, the personal pronoun il means "he". The present conditional voudrait translates as "would like". The pronunciation will be "eel voo-dreh" in French.
"It'll rain" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il pleuvra. The masculine singular pronoun and third person singular future indicative translate literally into English as "It will rain." The pronunciation will be "eel pluh-vra" in French.
"Here you are, mine!" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Eccoti, il mio!Specifically, the adverb ecco is "here (are, is)". The personal pronoun ti means "(informal singular) you". The masculine singular definite article il means "the". The masculine pronoun mio translates as "mine".The pronunciation will be "EKH-koh-tee eel MEE-oh" in Italian.
Yes. Ex: il est grand (he is tall) where the adjective grand qualifies the pronoun il.
"He's funny" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Il est marrant."Specifically, the subject pronoun "il" means "he." The verb "est" means "(He/she/it) is." The masculine adjective "marrant" means "funny."The pronunciation is "ee-leh mah-raw."
"He's handsome" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Il est beau."Specifically, the subject pronoun "il" means "he." The verb "est" means "(He/she/it) is." The masculine adjective "beau" means "beautiful, handsome."The pronunciation is "ee-leh boh."
"(As for) him, he loves you" is one English equivalent of the French phrase Lui, il t'aime.Specifically, the personal pronoun lui is the emphatic "him." The subject pronoun il means "he, (masculine-gendered) it." The object pronoun te* means "(informal singular) you." The present indicative verb aime translates as "(he/one/she) does love, is loving, loves."The pronunciation will be "lwee eel tehm" in French.*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a verb whose spelling begins with a vowel.
Il
"The brave one" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase il bravo.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article ilmeans "the." The masculine adjective/pronoun bravo means "brave (one)." The pronunciation is "eel BRAH-voh."