-le at the end of a word in German is generally used to form the diminuitive form of a word, similar to the suffixes -chen, -lein and -la, i.e:
Bube - Bübchen - Büble
Stein - Steinchen - Steinle
Baum - Bäumchen - Bäumle
You mean, how do you write it? Teiler. And you say it Tie-le. ^.^ But if it is just Tyler than you say it Tu-le or Two-le... XD Hope that helps!
"du" means "you" (informally) in German. In French it is the combination of de + le meaning "some" ex: du boeuf
'le' can mean 'the'(masculine) or 'it'
Feux mean Fire and le mean the. The Fire
A le a (of what)
Possible root Schmelz meaning melt, or enamel-le is normally used to indicate the diminutive form, meaning little
Le directeur : the boss
what does ashley mean in in german
Franco-German Brigade's motto is 'Dem Besten verpflichtet/Le devoir d'excellence'.
Do you mean elan? Then the word exists in German
LE can mean many things. for ex in Investment banking LE can mean Legal Entity. In case of retail banking it can mean Loan Equivalent and so on.
"Le Plus" is French for "most".