Il fais grismeans It is grey. Il meaning it. Fais meaning Is. And Gris meaning grey.
In French, "Le temps est nuageux", "le ciel est nuageux" mean that "it's cloudy". 'Il fait nuageux' is grammatically correct but this is not a sentence a native speaker would use.Native speakers would use "Il fait gris" (It's grey) - notice that this form may sound incorrect but is in fact coming from "Il fait un temps gris" (which would sound strange for the natives).
"Il fait quoi?" is French for "What is he doing?" or "he does what?".
Il fait du soleil means "it is sunny" in French.
"Fait" is a French word that translates to "done" in English. It is often used in phrases like "fait accompli," which refers to something that has already been decided or completed, leaving no opportunity for debate or change. In English, "fait" can also be encountered in specific contexts, particularly in discussions involving French culture or language.
these are scrambled French words: fait from the verb faire (to do), temps meaning weather, y a : is there, and soleil meaning sun. The whole is French for two-year olds.
il fait gris means : a Gray
In French, "Le temps est nuageux", "le ciel est nuageux" mean that "it's cloudy". 'Il fait nuageux' is grammatically correct but this is not a sentence a native speaker would use.Native speakers would use "Il fait gris" (It's grey) - notice that this form may sound incorrect but is in fact coming from "Il fait un temps gris" (which would sound strange for the natives).
"Il fait quoi?" is French for "What is he doing?" or "he does what?".
gris is a masculine adjective meaning grey/gray in French. The feminine form is 'grise'.
"Il fait quoi?" is French for "What is he doing?" or "he does what?".
"il fait sombre" means "it's dark" when translated from French to English
"J'ai fait mes devoirs" in French translates to "I have done my homework" in English.
Il fait du soleil means "it is sunny" in French.
In English, gris is gray (or grey for UK spelling)
french to English "you are what you make breathe"
is it
"Fait" is a French word that translates to "done" in English. It is often used in phrases like "fait accompli," which refers to something that has already been decided or completed, leaving no opportunity for debate or change. In English, "fait" can also be encountered in specific contexts, particularly in discussions involving French culture or language.