indefinite article (plural): des
des voitures rouges : red cars
definite article (plural): les
les voitures bleues: the blue cars.
un masculineune femininedes m or f plural
'An' is an article. Other articles are 'a' and 'the'. 'A' and 'an' are the singular articles. 'A' is used before words that begin with a consonant. 'An' is used before a vowel. ' The' is used as the plural article.
If you are speaking Spanish, the plural of "la" is "las".If you are speaking French, the plural of "la" is "les".In either case, these are the feminine definite articles, as opposed to the masculine definite articles ("el" and "los" in Spanish, vs. "le" and "les" in French, for singular and plural).
blanc (masc.), or blanche (fem.) mean "white in French. The additional "s" indicates the plural.
Mother is "mère" in French. The plural is "mères" (with the additional "s" as the plural mark)
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
un masculineune femininedes m or f plural
Mots
'An' is an article. Other articles are 'a' and 'the'. 'A' and 'an' are the singular articles. 'A' is used before words that begin with a consonant. 'An' is used before a vowel. ' The' is used as the plural article.
Femmes is a French equivalent of the English word "women." The feminine plural noun may be preceded immediately by the feminine plural les since French employs definite articles when English does and does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(ley) fahm" in French.
Jeux français is a French equivalent of the English phrase "French games." The masculine plural phrase may be preceded immediately by the masculine plural les since French employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "zhuh fraw-seh" in French.
The word is "mots" (plural of "mot")
The plural of l'amie (friend, singular feminine) is les amies. (plural feminine). The French articles are le for masculine and la for feminine, but in front of a vowel it is l' .
'French words' is 'mots français', or because they use articles more than we do, 'les mots français'. Depends on context.
If you are speaking Spanish, the plural of "la" is "las".If you are speaking French, the plural of "la" is "les".In either case, these are the feminine definite articles, as opposed to the masculine definite articles ("el" and "los" in Spanish, vs. "le" and "les" in French, for singular and plural).
The indefinite article in French is un, masculine or une, feminine
Definite Articles There are four definite articles and they all mean "the" Masculine/singular :El Masculine/plural : Los Feminine/singular Feminine/plural :Las Indefinite articles There are four indefinite articles. The singular ones mean "a" and the plural ones mean "some" Masculine/ singular :Un Masculine/plural :Unos Feminine/ singular :Una Feminine/plural :Unas