In French, "la biche" translates to "the doe" in English. It specifically refers to a female deer.
It means "the teacher likes to play the guitar."
"Le soeur de" is not a valid phrase in French. "Le" means "the," "soeur" means "sister," and "de" means "of." If you meant to say "la soeur de," it translates to "the sister of."
"Le" and "la" are definite articles in French, not adjectives. They are used before nouns to indicate the gender and number of the noun. "Le" is masculine singular (the), and "la" is feminine singular (the).
In French, "le" is used before masculine singular nouns, while "l'" is a contracted form of "le" or "la" used before a noun starting with a vowel or silent 'h'. Both "le" and "l'" mean "the" in English.
Le pere = Father La mere = Mother Le lapin = Rabbit
La femme et le chapeau : the woman and the hat
the sea (it should be - la mer)
you are a donkey
cheveux droits
"le père et la mère" : the father and the mother.
Le boulanger is 'the baker' in French. The bakery is 'la boulangerie'.
It is Frence and means "let it be" or "leave it alone".
la matin means the morning
it's the cheese
'Le temps' is the weather, but temps can also mean timeLa MétéoTranslation of the word weather in french is 'le temps'
la = the (feminine) ; le = the (masculin) vie = life dans = in