Je is the first person singular, used in the same way as 'I' in English. 'On' is unpersonal. When using 'on', conjugate the verb at the third person singular. It is used as 'one' in English: 'on dit que ...'> one says that ...
"Je peux" is used more commonly in everyday conversation to express "I can," whereas "je puis" is a more formal and literary term used to express the same meaning. It is rare to hear "je puis" in modern spoken French.
je ne pas deTry "Je n'aime pas" :)
In French, "I will travel" would be "je voyagerai", where "je" is the subject pronoun "I", "voyager" is the infinitive for "to travel", and "ai" is the future tense ending corresponding to "I will".
sin je je je je means that to to to to
vous savez que je vous aime or tu sais que je t'aime (use the same pronoun in the sentence) means 'you know I love You'
je voulais, tu voulais : I wanted, you wanted
The motto of Quebec City is 'I shall put God's gift to good use'.
"Je" means "I" in French. People use it as a way to express themselves or describe their actions in first person.
If you are male, "je suis heureux." If you are female, "je suis heureuse." You could also use "content(e)."
moje meno je... or you can use volam sa...
I love you Liane and I always will (we wouldn't say this in French - we would use the future tense)
"je sais mais je pense que je vais être en retard" means "I know, but I think I will be late" in English. Note: use "en retard" for "behind schedule"; use "tard" to express lateness. Examples: le train est en retard (the train is running late); le diner s'est fini tard : the dinner finished late (but there was no set hour to finish it, so it wasn't "en retard")