"les devoirs" (masc., often used in the plural) means 'the homework'
"fais tes devoirs"= do your homework
j'ai du mal avec mon devoir de français= I have some trouble with my French homework
The phrase "les deux" is a phrase that comes from the French language. The French phrase, "les deux" translates from French to English to the phrase "the two".
French speaking countries
"Les villes" in French means "the cities" in English.
"Les couleurs" is a French term that translates to "the colors" in English.
"les cimes" means the summits, the tops (of mountains, of trees, ...)
sans les mots
"The" and "of the" or "some" are English equivalents of the French words les and des.Specifically, the feminine/masculine plural definite article les is "the". The word des translates as "of the" when it combines the preposition de ("of") with the article les. It translates as "some" when it functions as a partitive.The pronunciation will be "ley" and "dey" in French.
My sister has eyes.
The fingers is an English equivalent of 'les doigts'. The words in French are pronounced 'lay dwah'. The masculine definite article 'les' means 'the'. The masculine gender noun 'doigts' means 'fingers'.
if you mean literally it's "tout les mots"
les amis means 'friends' in French.
"Les" and "Le" are French words, specifically the plural and singular for the English word the."Las" and "La" are Spanish words. "Las" is feminine plural and "La" is feminine singular, both signifying the English word the.
The phrase "les deux" is a phrase that comes from the French language. The French phrase, "les deux" translates from French to English to the phrase "the two".
Salut, les filles! in French means "Hi, girls!" in English.
'Les chips' is French for crisps.
"Favorite stores" in English is les magasins favoris or les magasins préférés in French.
les fauteuils means chairs in English.