Il va in French means "He (it, one) goes" in English.
"Go again!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Va encore! The pronunciation of the present imperative in the second person informal singular will be "va kore" in northerly French and "va aw-kor" in southerly French.
"What are we going to do?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Qu'est-ce qu'on va faire? The question translates literally as "What is this that one is going to do?" in English. The pronunciation will be "keh-sko va fer" in French.
"Hey there! How's it going?" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Coucou! Comment ça va? The question translates literally as "Cuckoo! How does that go?" in English. The pronunciation will be "koo-koo kuh-maw sa va" in French.
"Laisse Tomber", also known in English as : "drop it"
"Hey! All's well!" and "Hi! Is everything going well?" are English equivalents of the French phrase Salut! Ça va bien.Context determines whether an observation (case 1) or a question (example 2) suits. The pronunciation will be "sa-lyoo sa va bya" in northerly French and "sa-lyoo sa va byeng" in southerly French.
he will arrive soon
Ça va? in French means "How are you doing?", "How are you?" in English.
"Wassup?" in English is Ça va? ("How are you?") in French.
"He goes" in French is "il va."
"Go to sleep!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Va dormir! The command translates as "He (one, she) goes to sleep" when preceded by the respective third person singular subject pronoun il, on or elle. The pronunciation will be "va dor-meer" in French.
"Screw you!" in English is Va te faire foutre! in French.
Comment ça va? in French means "How are you?" in English.
Va-t'en! is a French equivalent of "You get out of here!" The present imperative, reflexive pronoun, and partitive also may be translated into English as "Be off!" or Go away!" The pronunciation will be "va-taw" in French.
Comment ça va les études? in French means "How are you managing with your studies?" in English.
"He's going to the market" is one English equivalent of the French phrase Il va au marché.Specifically, the masculine subject pronoun il is "he." The present indicative verb va means "(he/it/one/she) does go, goes, is going." The word au means "to the" from the combination of the preposition � ("at, to") and the masculine singular definite article il ("the"). The masculine noun marché translates as "market, martketplace."The pronunciation will be "eel vah oh mahr-shey" in French.
Ça va aujourd'hui, vous deux? in French is "Do you feel ok today, you two?" in English.
"Go again!" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase Va encore! The pronunciation of the present imperative in the second person informal singular will be "va kore" in northerly French and "va aw-kor" in southerly French.