There are many - very often the ending 'ée' implies a larger size or portion of something - un jour (a day) une journée (a whole day long) une cuillère (a spoon) une cuillerée (a spoonful)
"The end" is to be said "La Fin" in French.
-ee
Cherry is Cherie.Cherie is Pronounced shAre-Ee, and means Dear, as in, My Dear.For future reference, you can use wordreference.com to figure out which are what in different situations.
EE-poh-leet (French)
"un cygne" is pronounced "seegn" in French ("ee" as in "heel")
"I" in French is pronounced as "ee" like in the English word "see."
French and English both have the word "idiot" (in French it is pronounced "ee-dyo"). The plural in French is formed in the usual fashion--by adding an s to the end. And as normal, this does not change the pronunciation. un idiot des idiots
You get close to the French pronunciation by juxtaposing the English word "bra" and the sound "ee". "bra-ee". (A phonetic spelling is /bʁɑj/, assuming the font shows up properly)
The French word "idole" is pronounced as "ee-dohl" in English.
iciici (pronounced ee-see)
dépouillé [day-poo-ee-yay]
The word is spelled exactly the same, but pronounced 'or-ee-bleh'
It is idiote pronounced ee-dyoh-t:)
Italienne in the feminine and italien in the masculine are French equivalents of the English word "Italian".Specifically, the word is an adjective in its singular form. The feminine form is pronounced "ee-tah-lyehn". The masculine equivalent is pronounced "ee-tah-lyah" in French.
Illinois is already a French word. It is pronounced Ill-in-nwa.
The French word for 'July' is 'Juillet'. To pronounce July in French you say 'zhwee-eh'.
The word is pronounced as myehl, or mee/ell. It means honey in English, and is masculine, le miel.