Les is the plural version of Le. It accompanies masculine nouns and is basically the same as the article the in English.
Yes, in English grammar, adjectives typically come before nouns.
In French, "the" can be translated as "le," "la," or "les" depending on the gender and number of the noun it is referring to. "Le" is used before masculine singular nouns, "la" before feminine singular nouns, and "les" before plural nouns of either gender.
"les" is a definite article, translated by "the". It is used as the plural of "le" (masculine), la (feminine), l' (apostrophe, used in both masculine or feminine, but before a vowel sound).La voiture (singular, feminine: the car) > les voitures vont vite (the cars are going fast)le chien aboie > les chiens aboient (the dog is barking > the dogs are barking)
To say "the" in French, you would use "le" for masculine nouns, "la" for feminine nouns, and "les" for plural nouns regardless of gender.
In French, nouns have gender:le for masculine nouns (the boy = le garçon)la for feminine nouns (the woman = la femme)les is used for plural nouns (the boys = les garçons; les femmes = the women)
Yes, in English grammar, adjectives typically come before nouns.
In French, "the" can be translated as "le," "la," or "les" depending on the gender and number of the noun it is referring to. "Le" is used before masculine singular nouns, "la" before feminine singular nouns, and "les" before plural nouns of either gender.
"les" is a definite article, translated by "the". It is used as the plural of "le" (masculine), la (feminine), l' (apostrophe, used in both masculine or feminine, but before a vowel sound).La voiture (singular, feminine: the car) > les voitures vont vite (the cars are going fast)le chien aboie > les chiens aboient (the dog is barking > the dogs are barking)
In the English language, adjectives usually come before the nouns they describe. For example, "the bold text". The word "bold" is the adjective, and it comes before the noun it is describing.In some other languages, such as Spanish, adjectives come after the nouns.
In English, possessive pronouns, like adjectives, usually come before the nouns that they modify.
the nouns France, français, French comes from the name of the Gaulish Germanic tribe the Franks ('les Francs' in French.)
A determinant un French is ''déterminent'', but if you want to know the actual determinants, there would be ''la, le, les, etc.'' La is used for feminine nouns. Le is used for masculine nouns. Les is used for plural nouns.
To say "the" in French, you would use "le" for masculine nouns, "la" for feminine nouns, and "les" for plural nouns regardless of gender.
In French, nouns have gender:le for masculine nouns (the boy = le garçon)la for feminine nouns (the woman = la femme)les is used for plural nouns (the boys = les garçons; les femmes = the women)
It's pretty easy to figure out... Proper nouns are capitalized. Common nouns come before the verb-- nouns are the doers, while the verb is the doing. In your sentence 'lived' is the verb. The teacher taught students.
Articles are words that come before nouns. Three articles in English are the, a and an.
you can come up with millons of nouns