In French Je means I. Aller is a verb which means to go. In the French language you must conjugate the verbs so that the verb agrees with the first person, third person, etc. Since Je means I and aller means to go, the proper way to say I go would be to write Je vais. Je aller really means nothing.
I want to go home
je vais à Paris Je vais aller à Paris.
Je veux aller en vacances.
How can I get there?
Je vais aller au lit bientôt.
"puis-je aller à mon placard" (or "est-ce que je peux aller ...") means "May I go to my cupboard / locker" in French.
"Je vais aller chez" is French for "I am going to go to." It is a phrase used to indicate that someone is planning to go to a specific location.
puis-je aller aux toilettes? = May I go to the restroom?
je dois aller (quelque part) maintenant : I must go (somewhere) nowje dois m'en aller maintenant: I have to leave now, I must go now
je dois y aller, je dois m'en aller
On tuesday, i go to.... [mardi=tuesday, je vais (aller)=to go]
Depends if you mean "I'm outta here!" or "Where's the washroom?" "I'm outta here!" Je dois y aller /or/ je dois m'en aller "Where's the washroom" où sont les toilettes, je dois aller aux toilettes.
I want to go to the disco
I want to go home
I can go a' my locker
The verb for "je vais" is "aller," which means "to go" in English.
Aller means 'to go (to)' in French. Je suis allé / je suis allée means 'I went ...' in English.