plaït
Plaît is the third-person singular present indicative form of the French verb plaire, meaning to please or to be pleasing. In French, plaire is used with the indirect object pronoun to indicate to whom something is pleasing; the thing that pleases is the subject of the sentence. The common construction is cela/ça + plaît + à + someone, or the shorter form cela me plaît, meaning that something is to my liking. For example, Cela plaît à Marie means "That pleases Marie," and Ça me plaît means "I like that." The verb also appears with other subjects: Le film plaît au public (The film pleases the audience), Cet acteur plaît à tout le monde (That actor is popular with everyone).
Conjugation and related forms: The full present tense is je plais, tu plais, il/elle plaît, nous plaisons,
Usage notes: Plaire contrasts with déplaire, meaning to displease. Expressions with plaire often describe tastes, attractiveness,
Etymology: Plaire derives from Latin placere, meaning to be agreeable or pleasing. In modern French, the form