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 will go'.
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]
I want to go to the disco
I can go a' my locker
I want to go home
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.
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.