Yes. Ex: J'y suis, j'y reste (here I am, here I stay) - Je vais y aller (I'm going to go there - before the verb aller) - elle y pense souvent (she often thinks about it)
No, the pronoun 'y' typically comes before the verb in French.
In French, you place "mal" before the verb "comprennent." So, the correct sentence is: "Il y a des gens qui mal comprennent."
You should say Allons-y, which literally means "Let's go there" or "Let's go to it". In French grammar, the verb "aller" needs a place or verb to follow it. The "y" is the French pronoun for "there", so it fills the "place requirement".
Because "convey" is a VERB and verbs are conjugated and "conveyed" is the past participle.
The location of an person is there existing is covered by the verb "to be". For example: "You are here." or "You are there." To say X is present at Y, you would say X is at Y or X is Y. Is, am, are, are forms of "be".
"Y" translates to "il y a" in French, which means "there is" or "there are" depending on the context.
You should say Allons-y, which literally means "Let's go there" or "Let's go to it". In French grammar, the verb "aller" needs a place or verb to follow it. The "y" is the French pronoun for "there", so it fills the "place requirement".
The x-axis comes first. because x comes before y.
"Il y a" is used in French to indicate the existence of something or to express the passage of time. It can be used to say "there is/there are" or "ago." For example, "Il y a un chat dans le jardin" (There is a cat in the garden) or "Je suis parti il y a une heure" (I left an hour ago).
these are scrambled French words: fait from the verb faire (to do), temps meaning weather, y a : is there, and soleil meaning sun. The whole is French for two-year olds.
Yes. Remember it like this: X comes before Y (alphabetically). D comes before R {Domain & Range}
on a coordinate grid, X always comes before Y
Je n'ai ni tante n'oncle. "Je ne (insert verb) ni x ni y" is how to say " I (verb) neither x nor y". It's one of those words like jamais or rien which you use with the negative form or the verb
Zoologist. "I" comes before "Y"
"I can go there" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Je peux y aller.Specifically, the personal pronoun je is "I". The verb peux means "(I) am able, can". The adverb y means "there". The present infinitive aller translates as "to go".The pronunciation will be "zhuh puh-zee ah-ley" in French.
Because 'Y' comes after 'X' and before 'Z' in the English alphabet.
On a graph, the x-axis comes first. The x-axis can be described as a number line, for which the y-axis rests on. The z-axis rests on both.
"There are" and "There is" are English equivalents of the French phrase Il y a.Specifically, the subject pronoun il literally is "he, it, one." The adverb y means "there." The present indicative verb a literally means "(he/it/one/she) has." The entire phrase translates according to context, with meanings ranging from "ago" in terms of time or "There are" and "There is" situationally.Whatever the meaning, the pronunciation will be "ee-lya" in French.