that's working, I love you
J'espere que tu sait ca. J'espere que vous savez ca.
Jaime well when you do it for me
Salut, ca va Salut, comment allez vous
what are the questions of functional english in ca
like this
'ça va' means "it's going well"; 'ça marche' means "it is functioning" (device, appliance, trick...)
The question/statement 'Ca marche' means It's working out[or Is it working out?]. In the word-by-word translation, the demonstrative pronoun 'ca' means 'that'. And the verb 'marche' means '[he/she/it] does work out, is working out, works out'.
"Aime ca" means "like that". It is incomplete though , If you wrote " IL Aime Ca" that would mean "HE Likes That" and that would be more complete
Comment ca marche
The question/statement 'Ca marche dans la France' means It's working out in France [or How is it working out in France?]. In the word-by-word translation, the demonstrative pronoun 'ca' means 'that'. The verb 'marche' means '[he/she/it] does work out, is working out, works out'. The preposition 'dans' means 'in'. And the definite article 'la' means 'the'.
It will
Comment êtes-vous ? "Comment ca va?" or just "Ca va?" (informal) "Comment allez vous?" (formal)
Vous vous n'en faites pas. Pour vous ce n'est pas grave. Ca vous est égal
"ça marche ?" has the meaning of "how it's going?" in the affirmative form it means "OK / no problem" "- je prends les deux pour cinq euros" "- ça marche" ("I'll take both for five euros" "OK")
"And I know that you like it too."
Comment allez-vous? Vous allez bien? Comment ça va? Ca va?
ça fonctionne mais ça ne marche pas. This is a play on words. French may say about any device that it is working / in working order (fonctionner), but also using the verb "marcher" (to walk). Ex: ma montre fonctionne, mais elle ne marche pas : my watch is working, but it does not walk / work.