l'intrus = the intruder
"L'Espagne" is French for "Spain".
the has no gender in french considering you say the girl or the boy in English it would be LA fille ou LE garçon in french
Willy is spelled the same in French.
'le' and 'la' are the two French words which correspond to the English word 'the'. 'le stylo' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a biro) 'la plume' :: 'the pen' (usually, but not always, a fountain-pen) French needs two words for 'the' because its nouns all have grammatical gender (a feature which is absent in English). le stylo, le soleil, le violon :: the pen, the sun, the violin but la plume, la lune, la guimbarde :: the pen, the moon, the jawharp When 'le' or 'la' precede a word that begins with a vowel, they shorten to 'l' ''l'alouette' 'the lark' (NOT la alouette); 'l'opposite' 'the opposite' (NOT le opposite). So there is really no difference between 'l' and 'le' in French. 'Le' becomes 'l' when the next letter is a vowel.
The word "llama" has two L's because it is derived from the Quechua language, where the double L represents a unique sound that does not exist in English. The double L is pronounced as a "y" sound in English, which is why llama is pronounced "yah-mah."
the ( preceding a word beginning with a vowel)
'une salope' is a disparaging French word meaning "s-l-u-t"
L'église (the la is switched for L' as the word begins with a vowel) means the church in French.
Il
The words l'amour are French and translate into English as the word love. L'amour is also the title of a song by Erasure.
The same as English.
Livre
"L'Espagne" is French for "Spain".
libre, liberté, large, lion
'L ' amour' meaning 'the love'.
L' and le - both of which mean "the" in English -- are the articles which are used with the French word avion. The choice depends upon whether the article directly comes before the masculine singular noun - in the first case - or has an intervening word - such as an adjective or number, in the second instance. The pronunciation will be "a-vyo" in French.
Astronaute is a French equivalent of the English word "astronaut."Specifically, the French word can be either a feminine or a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is l. The apostrophe is placed immediately after the letter l and immediately before the first letter of the noun.The pronunciation is "ah-stroh-noht."