voir voir
Voir (verb) means 'to see' in French.
"Voyez" is a form of the French verb "voir" in the second person plural, present tense. It means "you see" or "you are seeing."
Voir is a French verb which means to see.
"see me rock" [english-to-french] "me voir rock" [french-to-english] "me rock". Why this is, I'm not quite sure. But I do know that the French language swaps around the noun or pronoun with the verb.
The verb in French for "to learn" is "Apprendre"
une vue (noun) is a sight in French. Vue as a form of the verb 'voir' (to see) is translated 'seen'.
Voyer comes from the verb "voir", to see. Voyez! means "see!" and "vous voyez" means "you see".
No, but "attendre" is a verb meaning "to wait"
No, "appeler" is a regular -er verb in French. It conjugates according to regular -er verb patterns.
'Voir' and 'savoir' both come from Latin but are not related.'Voir' comes from the Latin verb 'videre', via old french 'vedeir', then 'veoir', then 'voir'.Savoir comes from the popular Latin 'sapere, via the old French: 'sabir' (Strasbourg's Oath, 842), then 'saveir', then 'savoir'.
That is plomb!
No, "use" is an English verb (or it can also be a noun). The French version is "utiliser" (verb) and "utilisation" (noun).