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When are le, la, l, les and vos used in French?

In French, le, la, l' and les are all personal pronouns with direct objects. The masculine singular is le, the feminine singular is la and the plural is les. When the masculine and feminine singular direct object personal pronouns encounter verbs that start with vowels or silent H, they have the problem of omitting sounds in the form of L'. The position of the direct object personal pronoun is as follows:

First, before the verb:

I love you.

Listen.

Illahaite. (huh? The h at the beginning of r is hiss, so the direct object pronoun la in front of it cannot be omitted)

Second, it comes before the infinitive.

I love you.

He can talk.

Il va la ha? r.

3. In the compound past tense with avoir as the auxiliary verb, the sex sum of the past participle is consistent with the direct object pronoun before the auxiliary verb. For example:

I love you.

I love you.

Is it? e.

Fourthly, in imperative sentences, after verbs, hyphens are added between verbs and direct object pronouns. For example:

Amy.

Rigad-Ra.

Hayes-la.

Vos is a possessive adjective, meaning "yours" or "yours". Vos is a plural form, used before plural nouns.

Voss Amies

Vos coordinate instrument

Voss Souris