faire la vaisselle is 'to do the dishes' in French. The first 'a' stands for 'avoir' indicating that it is used in a past time.
Vous avez fait la vaisselle=You did the washing up. Tu as fait la vaiselle?=You did the washing up (informal)? J'ai fait la vaiselle. =I did the washing up.
il fait means 'he does' in French. Il fait la vaisselle: he doing the dishes when speaking about of the weather, it translatales as 'it is' il fait du vent : it is windy il fait beau : the weather is fine il fait (du) soleil : it is sunny
She does the washing up every day. -- Elle fait la vaisselle tous les jours.
Depends. Technically, 'fait' alone is present tense, but if you have the verb "avoir" just before it, the verb structure is past tense. For instance 'il fait la cuisine' = he is cooking, but 'il a fait la cuisine' = he has cooked and 'il avait fait la cuisine' = he had cooked.
Faire la vaisselle Or Lavez la vaisselle
A dish is 'un plat' in French. To do the dishes is 'faire la vaisselle' or 'laver la vaisselle' (la vaisselle being the kitchenware)
(il) fait de la menuiserie - he does woodwork (making furniture and fixtures etc)
il fait de la voile, il navigue à la voile.
La brume (fem.) is a dense fog. il fait brumeux means 'it's foggy outside'
AnswerWeather = tempsthe weather is = le temps est (phonetical: leetom see)phonetical: and say it quite quick "leetom see bon" (the weather is good)
Literally, it means: I am going to the washing up. I think you want to say "I am going to do the washing up." The term used is "faire la vaisselle" - to do the dishes. You can say, "Je fais la vaisselle". I am doing the dishes. Or "Je vais faire la vaisselle". I am going to do the dishes.