Quel est le verbe écrit à l'infinitif means "what is the verb written in the infinitive form?" in French.
Verb: live Adjective: alive Adverb: lively
Le verbe "sait" à l'infinitif est "savoir".
"Tu va" means "you go" in French. It is the informal second person singular form of the verb "aller."
"complète les phrases avec la forme correcte du verbe au présent" means that you must fill in the blanks in the sentence, using the verb conjugated at the present time and at the correct person.
verbe
j'avais (verbe "avoir")
Quel est le verbe écrit à l'infinitif means "what is the verb written in the infinitive form?" in French.
un verbe
It is not, however, verbe is, and means verb.
the verbe "to swim" is nagerthe noun "swimming" is la natation
Verb: live Adjective: alive Adverb: lively
"to have fun" is "s'amuser" in French. For instance, "Amuses-toi bien !" means "Have (great) fun!". Search for "conjugaison du verbe s'amuser" for the different conjugated forms.
Arne Klum has written: 'Verbe et adverbe' -- subject(s): French language, Verb, Tense, Adverb
The English translation of the French word 'verbe' is verb. Sometimes, translations are direct, literal and obvious. In such cases, the words are called cognates. Other times, literal, word-by-word translations aren't what native speakers and writers actually use. In such cases, the words may look the same but have different meanings. In such cases, the words are called false cognates.
Desear could be translated in this case as the verbe to wish like this in the infinitive (it could also mean to desire) so the expression would be: "to wish you".
To deduce.