It's one of the French endings to some words. The endings change when the word is a masculine or feminine. The er, re and ir verbs are very confusing
The French word for England, "Angleterre," is feminine.
'ir al....' OR 'ir a la....' (depending on the Spanish gender of whatever 'the...' is) For example: ir al teatro (to go to the theatre) because 'teatro' is masculine ir a la corrida (to go to the bullfight) because 'corrida' is feminine
If it's a word referring to a person or animal, it means he has a penis. If it's a word referring to an object with no natural gender, then it has no meaning other than complying with Hebrew grammar. Most languages in the world have categories of nouns, called "noun classes". In Europe and the Middle East, there are usually only 2 noun classes: masculine and feminine. Some languages like German have 3. Swahili has 8! These are artibrary groups that do not affect meaning.
Voy - I go Vas - You go Va - he/she goes; you go (formal- i.e. president, teacher, doctor, etc.) Vamos - we go Vais - they go Van - they go (feminine or masculine); they go (formal).
it makes no sense to conjugue French verbs starting with 'ir'. But the second group of French verbs end with 'ir'. The standard model is 'finir'
verbs ending with -ir, -re and être is also a verb
or is usually masculine mostly used in profession ir usually indicates that verb is in third category ar usually indicates that verb is in first category
IR= industrial revolution FR= french revolution the IR affected the FR as the FR had short term effect while the IR had long term when they set a goal they made sure they will make the change but with the FR they will set a goal but will never active it.The FR and the IR together transformed the western world, both wanted to make a wild change.The IR was much significant as t made more changes ever then the FR, some item we still use today are from the IR, without the IR i will not be doing this as there will be no technology . i hope this work coz i had no idea of what am doing
Posso ir ao banho is a Portuguese equivalent of 'May I go to the bathroom'. The verb 'posso' means '[I] am able to or can'. The infinitive 'ir' means 'to go'. The word 'ao' combines the preposition 'a' and the masculine definite article 'o' to mean 'to the'. The masculine noun 'banho' means 'bathroom'. All together, they're pronounced 'POHSO-soo eeh* ow BAH-nyoo'.*The 'r' in Portugal and according to the carioca accent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil sounds more like the French 'r'than the Spanish.
It means, "to go to eat some..." By Spanish rules of construction, the 'some' will necessarily be a feminine plural noun.
Some common French -ir verbs include finir (to finish), choisir (to choose), partir (to leave), and dormir (to sleep). These verbs follow a specific conjugation pattern in the present tense and can be regular or irregular.