There are different types of pronouns; personal, demonstrative, reflexive, indefinite, interrogative, possessive, relative, reciprocal, absolute possessive.
Now, to answer your question, Some examples of pronouns are: I, you, her, him, we, and they. More complex pronouns could be myself, yourself, himself, herself, ourselves, this, that, these, or those.
"Le" is singular and "Les" is plural; the equivalents in English are "to him/her/it" and "to them".For example: I send a letter to him = Le envío una carta. // I send a letter to them = Les envío una carta.
tu me donnes le sel > tu me le donnes
The indirect pronoun that replaces le or les when followed by lo, los, la, or las is se.
The indirect object pronoun for the sentence is "nuestra" which means "our" in English. It indicates that the blouse is being given to "our sister Gisela".
"Them" is a personal pronoun and is typically used as an object pronoun, referring to people or things being spoken about. It is not a possessive pronoun like "theirs" or "theirs."
"Le" is singular and "Les" is plural; the equivalents in English are "to him/her/it" and "to them".For example: I send a letter to him = Le envío una carta. // I send a letter to them = Les envío una carta.
tu me donnes le sel > tu me le donnes
The indirect pronoun that replaces le or les when followed by lo, los, la, or las is se.
Le, les, me, te, se, nos, os
"For you I will do it" or "I will do it for you" may be English equivalents of "Je le ferai pour toi."The subject pronoun "je" means "I." The direct object pronoun "le" means "it." The verb "ferai" means "(I) will do, make" as the future tense of the infinitive "faire" in the first person singular. The preposition "pour" means "for." The personal pronoun "toi" means '(informal) you."All together, the pronunciation is "zhuh luh freh poor twah."
"Je le ferai pour toi" or "Pour toi je le ferai" may be French equivalents of "For you I will (do it)."The subject pronoun "je" means "I." The direct object pronoun "le" means "it." The verb "ferai" means "(I) will do, make" as the future tense of the infinitive "faire" in the first person singular. The preposition "pour" means "for." The personal pronoun "toi" means '(informal) you."All together, the pronunciation is "zhuh luh freh poor twah."
a picador is a bullfighter, the one who rides on a horse with a lance; but probably you wouldn't use 'le', which is an indirect object pronoun, or French for 'the', which is 'el' in Spanish.
me/ te/ le/ nos/ os/ les
"I'll put him on" is one English equivalent of the French phrase Je vous le passe.Specifically, the subject pronoun je is "I." The object pronoun vous means "(formal singular) you" or "(informal plural) you all" according to context. The object pronoun le means "it, him." The present indicative verb passe translates as "(I) am passing on/putting through, do pass on/put through, pass on/put through" in this context.the pronunciation will be "zhuh voo luh pahss" in French.
"The tablets" or "the compressed ones" are English equivalents of the Italian phrase le compresse.Specifically, the feminine definite article le means "the." The word compresse may be a feminine noun or pronoun in the plural. As a noun, it means "pills, tablets." As a pronoun, it means "compressed ones, compressed things."But either way, the pronunciation remains "leh kohm-PREHS-seh."
"Luh sah-vwahr" is the pronunciation of the French phrase le savoir.Specifically, the word le functions as an object pronoun in its masculine singular form. It means "it" in this context. The present infinitive savoir translates as "to know."
"Him" or "it" as an object pronoun and "the" as a masculine singular definite article are literal English equivalents of the French word le. Whatever the meaning or use, the pronunciation remains "luh" in French.