"They are called" or "They are named" are English equivalents of the French phrase Ils s'appellent. The declaration refers to males or to concepts, experiences, items or objects deemed masculine-gendered since the masculine plural subject pronoun is used. The pronunciation will be "eel-sa-pel" in French.
ils sont ennuyants is the phrase for they are boring. The phrase is translated from English to French.
You can say "they are going" in French as "ils vont".
ils sont = they are Note: "ils" is masculine of 'they"; "elles" is the feminine of "they".
"Ils aiment" means "they like" in French.
"Ils s'appellent" in French means "they are called" or "they call themselves."
Ils sont in French means "They are" in English.
Ils in French is "they" in English.
"They were very mad!" in English is Ils étaient très fâchés! in French.
ils sont ennuyants is the phrase for they are boring. The phrase is translated from English to French.
"They're hungry!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ils ont faim! The declaration translates literally as "They have hunger!" in English. The pronunciation will be "ee-zo feh" in French.
"They were friends till the end" in English is Ils étaient amis jusqu'à la fin in French.
"They compete" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ils matchent. The third person plural present indicative statement also translates as "They are competing," "They do compete" and "They're competing" according to context. The pronunciation will be "eel match" in French.
"They are" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ils sont.Specifically, the pronoun ils means "they." The verb sont means "(they) are." The pronunciation is "eel soh."
"What have they become?" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Que sont-ils devenus? The masculine plural question also translates less literally as "What became of them?" and "What happened to them?" in English. The pronunciation will be "kuh so-teel du-vu-nyoo" in Alsatian and Cevenol French.
how old are they is translated "quel âge ont-ils" in French.
"ils vont" means "they go / they are going" in French.
If you are trying to say "they" when referring to one female and a male, the pronoun automatically becomes male. So they=ils. Same goes even if there's a group of 20 girls and one guy. French is a very sexist language. :P