It means him,her,us
le mien, la mienne, les miens, les miennes
Le badmington (masculine noun)
'la' is the feminine form of 'the', the masculine form is 'le' and the plural form is 'les'
French: Le français English: l'anglais / Spanish: l'espagnol / German: l'allemand) geography: la géographie history: l'histoire math: Les mathématiques (Les maths) P.E.: l'éducation physique et sportive (EPS)?/Le sport Biology: la biologie chemistry: la chimie physics: la physique art: Le dessin drama: Le théâtre music: la musique science: Les sciences
There are 3 different ways of saying 'the' in French, which is very confusing, I know!! Let me take you through the three different ways: Le - pronounced 'luh'. The word 'le' is used when you are talking about a masculine word, such as 'le chocolat' which means 'the chocolate'. 'Chocolat' is a masculine noun, so le is used. In a sentence you might see/hear it as 'Où est le supermarché?' which means 'where is the supermarket?' La - pronounced 'lah'. The word 'la' is used when you are talking about a feminine word, such as 'la gare' which means 'train station'. 'Train station' is a feminine noun, so 'la' is used. In a sentence, you might hear it as, "Où est la gare?" which means, "Where is the train station?" Les - pronounced 'lay'. The word 'les' is used when you are talking about something that there is more than one of, such as 'les poulets' which means 'the chickens'. 'Les poulets' is talking about more than just one chicken, so 'les' is used. In a sentence, you might hear it as, "Où est les poulets?" which means, "Where are the chickens?"
The names of pronouns in French are "pronoms." Some common pronouns in French include "je" (I), "tu" (you), "il" (he), "elle" (she), "nous" (we), "vous" (you), and "ils" (they).
Indirect object pronouns like me, te, le, nos, os, les
Classroom: la classe desk: le bureau/ les bureaux chair: la chaise, les chaises blackboard: le tableau noir chalk: la craie, les craies book: le livre, les livres pencil: le crayon, les crayons pen: le stylo, les stylos lesson: la leçon, les leçons
le mien, la mienne, les miens, les miennes
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.
Le design (masc.)
L',* la, le, and les are French words which function as equivalents of the English word "the" and serve as pronouns. The respective pronunciations in French will be "la" ("her, it" "the"), "luh" ("him, it," "the"), and "ley" ("them," "the").*The vowel drops -- and is replaced by an apostrophe -- before a word which begins with a vowel. It represents either la or le.
When followed by lo, los, la, or las, le or les are replaced with se.
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.
les is the plural for both articles 'la' and 'le' in French
pour le/la/les
le, la, les