Les
The plural of "la fenetre" in French is "les fenetres."
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
Le means "The""Le" means "the" in French. It is used with masculine nouns; the corresponding feminine word "La."
The plural of l'amie (friend, singular feminine) is les amies. (plural feminine). The French articles are le for masculine and la for feminine, but in front of a vowel it is l' .
In French, "onion soup" is feminine: "la soupe à l'oignon."
The French plural is les girafes.
The plural of "la fenetre" in French is "les fenetres."
In French, the plural form of "la dame" is "les dames".
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
Tournez la page - plural Tourne la page - singular
les is an article meaning 'the' in French. It is used as a plural for 'la' (the / feminine) or 'le' (the / masculine)la maison (the house) > plural 'les maisons'le vélo (the bicycle) > plural 'les vélos'
The is 'le', 'la', or 'les' in French. 'le' is to be followed by a singular masculine noun, 'la' by a singular feminine, 'les' by a plural of any gender.
la piscine = swimming pool (les piscines = plural)
If you are speaking Spanish, the plural of "la" is "las".If you are speaking French, the plural of "la" is "les".In either case, these are the feminine definite articles, as opposed to the masculine definite articles ("el" and "los" in Spanish, vs. "le" and "les" in French, for singular and plural).
'les mains' (plural form of 'la main') means 'the hands' in French.
Yes. For example, la fille becomes les filles when plural and le garcon becomes les garcons. When made plural, la and le both become les.
The word "économie" is feminine in French. It is used with the feminine article "la," as in "la économie." In plural form, it becomes "les économies."