Descendre toi
descendre
Descendre
descendre
Descendre is 'to go down / to take down' in French. ex: descends le linge, s'il te plait : take down the laundry, please - le chat doit descendre de l'arbre : the cat has to get down the tree.
The translation for "go down" in French is "descendre".
If you mean lower : en bas or plus bas (further down), en contrebas (for sloping places - mountains ..) To look down - regarder en bas If you mean further south, it is au sud or plus au sud If you mean further , it is plus loin Verb to down (a drink) - descendre adjectives en panne (for a machine) déprimé(for a person) Noun Duvet : (for birds) Interjection A bas ... !!! = Down with ..!! I suppose there are other use for down in English but I don't know them all
"Dr. Mrs. Vandertramp" is the mnemonic for English speakers to remember which French verbs are conjugated in "passé composé" with the "être" auxiliary instead of "avoir". Each letter of the mnemonic represents one verb: Devenir - to become Revenir - to return Mourir - to die Rester - to stay Sortir - to go out/Exit Venir - to come Arriver - to arrive Naître - to be born Descendre - to descend or go down Entrer - to enter Rentrer - to return home Tomber - to fall Retourner - to return Aller - to go Monter - to climb/to go up Partir - to part/ to leave Passer and Deceder are also conjugated with "être" in some cases, like when they mean 'to pass by' and 'to decease'. Not much of a mnemonic, since remember initials apply to thousand of words and verbs, not just one verb per letter, let alone a whole list.
devenir devenu to become retourner retourné to return monter monté to go up, bring up rentrer rentré to bring in, put in sortir sorti to go out, get out venir venu to come arriver arrivé to arrive naître né to be born descendre descendu to go down entrer entré to enter rester resté to stay tomber tombé to fall revenir revenu to come back aller allé to go mourir mort to die passer passé to pass by, take (a test) partir parti to leave
The passé composé consists of two parts, the present tense of an auxiliary, or helping verb (either avoir or être ), and a past participle. ... However, several intransitive verbs, like aller (to go), require the auxiliary être instead. Note that the past participle agrees with the subject in number and in gender.
Down with in french is "à bas.." à bas les aristocrates ! : Down with the aristocrats !
The phrase "upside down" in French is "à l'envers."
The word "down" in French is spelled as "bas."