Gravy would translate to "la sauce".
face is spelled "visage" in French. The word "face" is also used, but is less common."visage", "figure", "face", "gueule", "faire face Ã?" and "affronter"
Yeh but it is the plural for 'the'. If you're using a feminie word in french such as 'cuisine' (kitchen) then you would use 'la', but if your using a masculin word such as 'lait' (milk) then you would use 'le'. However, there are some words which are plural and you need to use the word 'les'. For example ' les chats' which means the cats but 'la chat' but just be the cat!! So; Le=masculin La=feminine Les=plural(not masculin or feminine and usually more than one thing) ======= Actually, "le chat" (masculine) is cat; "la chatte" (feminine) is specifically a female cat. Either way, hte plural uses the article "les." "Les chats"--the (male) cats or a mixed group of male and female; or "les chattes"--a group of only females.
"le prof (le professeur) écrit les instructions" means 'the teacher writes the instructions'
"la province"
le matin - la matinée
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
The is 'le', 'la', or 'les' in French. 'le' is to be followed by a singular masculine noun, 'la' by a singular feminine, 'les' by a plural of any gender.
le mien, la mienne, les miens, les miennes
Le design (masc.)
pour le/la/les
le, la, les
In French, "mango" is masculine, so it is "le mangue."
Le, la, les Means the
Classroom: la classe desk: le bureau/ les bureaux chair: la chaise, les chaises blackboard: le tableau noir chalk: la craie, les craies book: le livre, les livres pencil: le crayon, les crayons pen: le stylo, les stylos lesson: la leçon, les leçons
Yes. For example, la fille becomes les filles when plural and le garcon becomes les garcons. When made plural, la and le both become les.
Le badmington (masculine noun)
le tien/la tienne/les tiennes - le votre/la votre/les votres- c'est à toi/vous