masculine
In French, "tea" is masculine, so it is "le thé."
a little bit of tea [ne-mno-go] little kid [mah-len-kii]
It can be hard to remember how to spell words in a different language. The word in questioned is spelled touche'.
The tea tree is called Manuka.
"Chest" contains the smaller word "tea".
Masculine.thé m.le thé, un thé, du thé
In French, "tea" is masculine, so it is "le thé."
The English language relates to natural gender unless qualified by a pronoun. Tea is an 'it' an inanimate object
Iced tea in French is "Thé glacé". "Tea" is masculine therefore there is no extra "e" at the end of "glacé"
tea is spelled 'thé' in French.
Thé glacé; but if you buy some in a French shop, you'll most likely find that the label says 'Ice Tea'.
Tè is an Italian equivalent of the English word "tea." The masculine singular noun may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The pronunciation will be "teh" in Italian.
thé means tea
Tè freddo is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "iced tea." The masculine singular noun and adjective also may be translated literally by word order into English as "tea cold." The pronunciation will be "teh-FRED-do" in Italian.
T maiuscole is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "capital T." The feminine singular noun and feminine/masculine singular adjective may be rendered additionally into English as "majuscule T" and "upper-case T." The pronunciation will be "tea meye-OO-skoo-ley" in Italian.
a little bit of tea [ne-mno-go] little kid [mah-len-kii]
'thé (masc.) some tea : du thé the tea : le thé