"Luh shoh-koh-lah" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le chocolat.
Specifically, the masculine singular definite article lemeans "the." The masculine noun chocolat means "chocolate." The word remains the same regardless of whether the speaker refers to chocolate as an ingredient or as a dessert.
le chocolat
"Luh sah-vwahr" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le savoir.Specifically, the word le functions as an object pronoun in its masculine singular form. It means "it" in this context. The present infinitive savoir translates as "to know."
Le chocolat (masc.) means 'the chocolate' in English. Bon is translated 'good'.
j'aime le chocolat Or if you want to say I love chocolate it's - J'adore le chocolat. Gymnast27 xx
The word is "chocolat" and it is masculine, e.g. le chocolat.
"Luh plee-azh" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le pliage.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article le means "the". The masculine noun pliagetranslates as "folding". Depending upon context, the phrase will be translated as "folding" or "the folding" since articles do not necessarily survive translation from French into English.
le chocolat (masc.)
"The A.D." is an English equivalent of the French phrase le DA. The pronunciation of the masculine singular phrase -- which references the directeur artistique ("artistic director") -- will be "luh da" in French.
'Le cousin' translates to 'the cousin' in English.
le chocolat chaud
le chocolat (masc.)
"The milk" is an English equivalent of the French phrase le lait.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article le means "the". The masculine noun lait translates as "milk". The pronunciation will be "luh leh" in French.