Often it's obvious, since it's a living thing and obviously male or female. For objects, you just have to learn the grammatical gender.
In French, "mango" is masculine, so it is "le mangue."
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
"Le" and "la" are definite articles in French, not adjectives. They are used before nouns to indicate the gender and number of the noun. "Le" is masculine singular (the), and "la" is feminine singular (the).
The word for "lobby" in French is "le hall" or "le vestibule."
Should be 'le' not 'la' - lac le biche - deer lake
le
Le concombre
Le is for masculine words, la is for feminine words.
In French, "mango" is masculine, so it is "le mangue."
The French word for "yak", a cow-like animal found in Tibet and Mongolia, begins with the letter Y. In French, it is spelled "yak" or "yack."
Le camping in French language.
French article: le [masculine]/la[feminine]= English article: the
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
The french word for penguin is "le manchot" (le mawnsho) or if it is a female penguin "la manchotte" (la man-shut). Another French word for penguin is "le pingouin" (le peng-wa).
"la province"
Le boulanger is 'the baker' in French. The bakery is 'la boulangerie'.
A determinant un French is ''déterminent'', but if you want to know the actual determinants, there would be ''la, le, les, etc.'' La is used for feminine nouns. Le is used for masculine nouns. Les is used for plural nouns.