The grandfather
The term 'Le grand-père' is used in French to refer to one's grandfather. It is often used in familial contexts and can be abbreviated to 'papy' in informal French language. Like most French nouns, it has a gender, which is male in this case.
The grandfather reads the newspaper every morning.
In this example, 'Le grand-père' serves as the subject of the sentence and 'lit le journal tous les matins' is the predicate, describing the action that the subject does. The verb 'lit' (reads) is in the present tense, as the action is habitual.
Marie's grandfather is very kind.
The term 'Le grand-père de Marie' is used here to express relationships, translating to 'Marie's grandfather'. The phrase shows a common use of the word 'de' to indicate possession.
It's time to wake up the grandfather.
In this example, 'le grand-père' is the direct object of the verb 'réveiller' (to wake up). This sentence shows how nouns can follow verbs to create meaningful sentences in French.