"je vais BIEN mais je suis très fatigué ; et toi ?" means "I am fine but I'm exhausted / very tired; and you?"
("je vais bon" does not exist in French) translate.Google.com
j'ai mal à la tête - I've got a head ache
"I'm tired; I have a headache. And you ?"
J'ai mal à la tête = I have a headache
It doesn't directly translate as it is gramatically incorrect. Roughly, I think it is meant to mean "Not bad I am tired of (from?) playing football (soccer) what did you do" In other words, it doesn't make a lot of sense!
je suis malade, or more dramatically, je souffre. I have a pain - j'ai mal.
Cava bien - im okay Pronounced Saa-Vaa Bee-annJe suis ok
Mal means Bad, examples: Te comportaste muy mal hoy. (You behave very bad today) Mal also means wrong, examples How did u answer to question number 20 ? answer: mal (spanish for wrong) Mal also means not well, examples: How are you felling today ? mal (spanish for not well) Mal also means evil, examples Es un enviado del mal. (He comes from evil) La pelea entre el bien y el mal. (The fight between good and evil) Mal also means Ill, examples Me siento mal. (I'm feeling ill)
J'ai mal à la tête = I have a headache
J'ai mal a la tete
Ma tete is My head, and mal is bad so my head hurts.
That is french and it means: my head hurts a lot.
j'ai mal à l'épaule - my shoulder hurts/is hurting me
I'm not feeling well is "Je suis mal" or "Je suis malade".
j'ai mal à la tête, le mot tête, c'est féminin
j'ai mal à la jambe - je me suis fait mal à la jambe
"je suis tellement fatigué de faire du mal" means "I am so tired of hurting others / being evil" in English.
'Je me suis fait mal' means "I hurt myself" or "I injured myself," indicating that the action was done to oneself, while 'J'ai fait mal' simply means "I hurt" or "I caused harm," without specifying who or what was affected.
'I am pretty proud of me'
"I am very beautiful and I am here, but I think it is bad."