It will get better
"va à la plage" means: go/going to the beach. (Note: the verb va is the 3rd person singular of aller (to go)."on the beach"
"Laisse Tomber", also known in English as : "drop it"
"ça va" means basically "how is it going?" As a question, ça va? can serve as a hello, and is usually replied to with "ca va" which would be like saying "I'm fine/okay". You could reply with "ca va bien" meaning "I am well", or "ca ne va pas" meaning "I'm not well."
ça va ! à plus. I'm okay, see you later.
If it is a questionCa va ?Are you going well ?If it is a affimative sentence?Ca va !I'm fineOften if you ask "ça va ?", the answer is "ça va."
"il VA", from the verb "aller" il VA à l'école = he's going to school il VA bien / il VA mieux = he is fine / he is better (health)
You might mean "Et vous les gars ? ça va pas mieux ?" "What about you guys ? aren't feeling better ?"
ca va = hơ are you
'bjr ca va' is shortened French for 'Bonjour ça va?', which in English means 'Hello, you ok?'.
It means "It's Ok" or "not too bad" in FrenchYou respond with this after someone says "Comment ça va?"-meaning "How's it going?"
It means how are you. For more informal conversations you can simply ask Ca va? It means how are you. For more informal conversations you can simply ask Ca va?
"va à la plage" means: go/going to the beach. (Note: the verb va is the 3rd person singular of aller (to go)."on the beach"
"Laisse Tomber", also known in English as : "drop it"
She's not going to Spain tomorrow.
la rose = the rose gree= not a french word ca va= how's it going
"ça va" means basically "how is it going?" As a question, ça va? can serve as a hello, and is usually replied to with "ca va" which would be like saying "I'm fine/okay". You could reply with "ca va bien" meaning "I am well", or "ca ne va pas" meaning "I'm not well."
'ça va sans dire' means 'that goes without saying'. It's also common to come across 'ça va sans dire, mais ça va mieux en le disant' which means 'that goes without saying, but that goes even better when you say it'