The meaning is 'After the flood'.
The words Après moi, le déluge -- after me (comes) the flood -- are attributed, as a premonition of the French Revolution, to King Louis XV of France (1710-74), although if anyone in fact used the phrase or one like it in this sense, it is more likely to have been his mistress Madame de Pompadour (1721-64), who is said to have predicted Après nous, le déluge : after us (comes) the flood.
The widespread use of that expression in French would be best translated as "after me, comes what may" in the sense that you don't bother.
le nan bread la nuts le nougat the list goes on... Also... nourriture: la nourriture- meaning food
i think its Italian forcoffee and my two additions
"O le a le mea ta te le galulue fa'atasi ai?" (Why can't we work together?) or "O le a le mea ta te le faifaimea fa'atasi ai?" (Why can't we do things together?). I have translated the meaning of "get along" in the context given, as there is no word or are no words to literally translate it to.
do it
The sun is . . .
Some words that end with LE are:AbleAppleBiblebubbleCablecradledazzledoleeagleexampleexilefablefolliclegablegentleguileholehorriblehustleicicleidlejunglekettleknuckleladlelittlemaplemilemulenoblenoodlepeoplepuddlequibblerattlerolerustlesablesinglestyleTabletripleukuleleunclevegetablevehicleviable.whalewhileyule
"le personne" is incorrect. "Personne" is a feminine noun in French, hence it is always "la personne," whether the person intended is masculine or feminine. The gender of words in French is a grammatical issue and usually has nothing to do with the intrinsic meaning of the words themselves.
Clayton le Moors was named after the village of Clayton, situated in Lancashire, England. The suffix "le Moors" refers to the moorland surrounding the area. The name "Clayton" is believed to derive from the Old English words "clay" and "tun," meaning "muddy farmstead."
le soleil (the sun)le raisin, le café, le pain, le thé, le croissant
"The King".
because "le" is used for masculine words and "la" is used for feminine words.
"le visage" is a French word meaning "the face" in English