The correct form is "je aller", but this does not appear very often (usually because the "aller" is conjugated to "je vais"). It is worth noting that this is an exception and all conjugated forms of "aller" do take the apostrophe like "j'allais" for "I used to go."
However, a perfect example would be: "Puis-je aller aux toilettes?" meaning "Can I go to bathroom?"
Je vais
'Je vais aller chez' is French for 'I will go'.
Où dois-je aller pour avoir (the thing you want to have)?
im going is : je vais or it can be je aller or je allez
"I want to come with you" in French is "Je veux venir avec toi."
You can say "Je vais y aller demain" in French.
je dois y aller, je dois m'en aller
'Je vais aller chez' is French for 'I will go'.
"Je dois m'en aller maintenant / je dois y aller" means 'I have to go now' in French.
Où dois-je aller pour avoir (the thing you want to have)?
im going is : je vais or it can be je aller or je allez
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.
Je veux aller
"puis-je aller à mon placard" (or "est-ce que je peux aller ...") means "May I go to my cupboard / locker" in French.
"je veux" I want to go to ... = je veux aller à ...
je dois m'en aller, mais je t'aime
"Je veux aller avec toi"
Je veux aller nager