Il a du brouillard means "He has fog"
If you say, Il y a du brouillard that would mean "There is fog"
in my dream town there is no / there are no ...
it is a consonet repeted like ll the another consenet like it was first ll the bb there you got it this is the only thing il ever put on this so vote please please please
It depends on where you're from. It's common in most of Spain to pronounce "ll" identically with "y". Other dialects pronounce it as an English speaker would a Z, or SH, or even as a sound that doesn't actually occur in English, but if you say "ree-YAY-no" most Spanish speakers will at least know what you mean even if they personally say it differently.
ill
la. or ln. ansewred by seth
il a means 'he has' in English.
the weather is good
il y a un ... > there is a ...
ll- prefixe mean
there is, there arethere is a stain on his suit= il y a une tâche sur son costumethere are better solutions = il y a de meilleures solutionsthere is / there are
If I am going to work, I('ll) work in (sport?)
It means slap someone
LL stands for SUV:
Guess
Leon Leonwood
2
No there isn't