It is feminine.
au revoir
Au revoir or Salut
Au-revoir pronounced ove-wa
'au' is singular = à+le (and it's masculine), 'aux' is plural = à+les (it can be masculine or feminine)
Au revoir les enfants was created on 1987-08-29.
"Bye" or "Goodbye" are English equivalents of the French phrase "Au revoir."Specifically, the word "au" combines the preposition "à" and the masculine singular definite article "le" to mean "till the, until the." The infinitive/masculine noun "revoir" means "to see again, the seeing again." The pronunciation is "oh-vwahr."
"Au" is a masculine article in French and is used with masculine nouns. It is a contraction of "à" + "le" (to + the).
"Goodbye, Ladies" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Au revoir, Dames."Specifically, the word "au"combines the preposition "Ã?" and the masculine singular definite article "le" to mean "till the, until the." The infinitive/mascuilne noun "revoir" means "to see again, seeing again." The feminine noun "dames" means "ladies."The pronunciation is "oh-vwahr dahm."
That is usually "Adiuex" or "Au revoir"
Au revoir
Au revoir
Bonjour and Au revoir are French equivalents of 'Hello' and 'Goodbye'. The masculine noun 'bonjour' combines the masculine adjective 'bon' with the masculine noun 'jour' to mean 'good day'. It's pronounced 'bohn-zhoor'.The word 'au revoir' combines the preposition 'a'with the masculine definite article 'le' and the infinitive 'revoir' to mean 'to the seeing again'. It's pronounced 'oh vwahr'.**The syllable 're' often is dropped in conversational French.
au revoir
Au Revoir, Monsieur is a French equivalent of 'Goodbye, Sir'. The word 'au' combines the preposition ' 'Ã?' and the masculine definite article 'le' to mean 'to the'. The infinitive 'revoir' means 'to see again'. Together, they're pronounced 'oh ruh vwahr'.
"Goodbye, Team" is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Au revoir, l'Équipe."Specifically, the word "au" combines the preposition "�" with the masculine singular definite article "le" to mean "till the, until the." The infinitive/masculine noun "revoir" means "to see again, seeing again." The feminine definite article "la"* means "the." The feminine noun "équipe" means "team."The pronunciation is "oh-vwahr leh-keep."*The vowel "a" drops before a noun that begins with a vowel. The temporary nature of that drop is indicated by an apostrophe immediately after the remaining letter "l" and immediately before the first letter of the following noun.
In French, "bye" is not a word. However, the phrase "au revoir" is the equivalent of "goodbye" in English.
it depends on whether what you wanna say later is masculine or feminine. if its feminine, then its: à la.... if its masculine, it would be "à le" but you say "au" instead. so basicaly it's "à" but if the place is masculine then you say "au". eg: je vais au restaurant je vais à la campagne