"The (male) cousin" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase le cousin. The pronunciation will be "luh koo-zeh" in French.
Le nom in French is "the name" in English.
Masculine becomes the gender of the word "violin" when translated from English to French. The French equivalent, violon, may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular le since French employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "(luh) vyo-lo" in Cariocan Brazilian and in continental Portuguese.
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
"My birthday is on the 7th of June" in English is Mon anniversaire est le 7 juin or Ma fête est le 7 juin in French.
le vendredi
Est le... in French means "Is the..." in English.
Le pied in French is "the foot" in English.
Le nom in French is "the name" in English.
Le coq in French means "the rooster" in English.
Le ciel in French means "the sky" in English.
"Future" in English is le futur in French.
Je le savais in French means "I knew it" in English.
Le sabre in French means "the saber" or "the cavalry sword" in English.
Voilà le stylo! in French is "Here is the pen!" in English.
"La cousine" in English is almost exactly the same as it's French counterpart; it means "the cousin". However, "la cousine" is specifically a female cousin whereas in English, "cousin" is not gender-specific.
Le dernier matin in French means "the last morning" in English.
Le petit in French means "the little one" or "the small one" in English.