"Des" is used in French as an indefinite article to denote plural nouns, translating to "some" or "any" in English. It is used when referring to an unspecified quantity of countable items, such as "des pommes" (some apples) or "des livres" (some books). You use "des" in contexts where the exact number is not important, and it indicates that more than one item is involved.
"Les" means the plural form of "the", while "Des" means the plural form of "some".
Des is a combination of de + les, so one time you would use it would be when saying from the (plural) eg. I bought clothes from the United States -- j'ai acheté les vêtements des États-Unis. Another time you would use it is when there is an unspecified amount of something or when you want to say 'some' eg. some apples - des pommes
"Des" is an article in French that is used as the plural form of "un" (masculine) and "une" (feminine), so it does not have a gender itself. Instead, it indicates that the nouns it precedes are plural, and those nouns can be either masculine or feminine. For example, "des pommes" (feminine) and "des livres" (masculine) both use "des."
'Des' is actually the plural form of the word "a". If you are saying anything in the plural form and want to use the in from of it, you have to use "des."
les Lunettes means glasses and it is feminin. but like english we don't say glass, we say glasses and "les" is for plural. des lunettes is feminin but instead of "les" you can use "des" (for plural)!!!
Tripe DES
"Des chaussures" is the plural for "une chaussure". You can use "chaussure" as a singular, if this is what you are asking.
Shoessee fournit des sandales, des mocassins plats, des baskets, des escarpins, des talons et des bottes de bonne qualité au prix le plus abordable cutt.ly/djzW9VO
When English "some" really means "a few", use quelques:J'ai quelques amis à ParisI have some/a few friends in ParisWhen it really means only "more than one" (and could be missed out), use des :J'ai des amis à ParisI have (some) friends in Paris
Joseph A. Schwane has written: 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ..' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...' 'Histoire des dogmes ...'
I think they used rifles or muskets im not sure ...
'des yeux marrons' - you can use 'des yeux noisette' for a hazelnut colour. the word 'brun' also meaning brown is used for the hair, but not for the eyes.