"revenir" is 'to come back' in French.
je reviens = I ....
tu reviens = you (singular + informal)
il, elle, on revient (he, she, one is coming back)
nous revenons = we are coming back
vous revenez = you (formal and / or plural) ...
ils, elles reviennent = they ...
"Reviens" in French means "come back" in English. It is the imperative form of the verb "revenir," which translates to "to come back" or "to return."
"Come back" in French is translated as "revenir".
To say "When are you back?" in French, you would say "Quand reviens-tu ?"
"I get home" in French can be translated as "je rentre chez moi."
Literally, "Reviens bientôt", but its melodramatic nature will get you stares. You'd be better off using euphemisms : "(Ne) reviens pas trop tard" ("Don't be back too late"), "(Ne) Tarde pas" ("don't be late"; "tarder" is hard to translate) or the snarkier "Essaie de (ne) pas te faire tuer" ("Try to not get yourself killed"). Don' t use negations (ne, n') if the conversation is informal.
You can say "Je viens de rentrer" in French, which translates to "I just got back."
"Come back" in French is translated as "revenir".
Je reviens tout de suite, je reviens de suite
'reviens vite'
je reviens bientôt
Ne reviens pas means "don't come back".
ne reviens pas
It is a form (3rd per. sing.) of the verb revenir, which means to come back.
Never come back is 'ne reviens jamais!' in French.
"je reviens tout de suite" or simply "j'arrive"
Je reviens à 14:30.
reviens-moi, je t'aime
"I get home" in French can be translated as "je rentre chez moi."