est has two meanings:
First, it's a verb, the 1st-person singular of être, "to be"
It's used the same way as in English, after a noun or pronoun -
C'est mon ami - He is my friend. Second, it's a direction and means "east"
"Est-ce que" is a combination of three words. It could be translated 'is it that ...' in English. It is used (very, very often) to form questions: est-ce que tu vas venir ? (will you come?) est-ce qu'il en reste ? (is there any left?) est-ce qu'on va au cinéma ? (do we go to the movies?) This is one of the most useful word groups that you can learn in French.
No. This is a sentence with only one word: "Go."
It is expedient that you go.
The French word est usually means is. e.g il est (he is). For this meaning, it is pronounced "eh".It can also mean east. (when used as l'est) When used this way, it sounds like the "est" in the English word "best".It would depend on where you see the word.Est is either the cardinal direction east, or the verb être (to be) conjugated to the third person singular.Je vais aller à l'est de Montréal; I am going to go east of Montréal.Le chat est un animal féroce; The cat is a ferocious animal.
The single word 'Go' can only be considered a sentence when followed by punctuation characters that end a sentence (exclamation marks, question marks, period).Example : "Go!" (this is a single-word imperative form with the subject you understood)
You can say "voilà" in French, which translates to "there you go" in English.
she is helpful and nice in french is: elle est gentil (nice) et serviable (helpful) sooo if you put it in a sentence: J'aime Marie, elle est gentil et serviable. translation: I like Mary, she's nice and helpful. well....there ya go <3 ^_^
aller is how you say go in french. x
Quand est-ce que vous partez à ....
où vas-tu
"Est-ce que" is a combination of three words. It could be translated 'is it that ...' in English. It is used (very, very often) to form questions: est-ce que tu vas venir ? (will you come?) est-ce qu'il en reste ? (is there any left?) est-ce qu'on va au cinéma ? (do we go to the movies?) This is one of the most useful word groups that you can learn in French.
will you go out with me is translated 'est-ce que tu voudrais sortir avec moi ?' in French.
"Est-ce que" is an extremely common feature in French. It serves to put your phrase in question form. English speakers can use 'did' in similar situations: Did he see ...? > Est-ce qu'il a vu ... ? In the French phrase, the verb will be in the past tense. Est-ce que can also stand for "do/does" when the French verb is in the present tense: Does he go to his car? > Est-ce qu'il va à sa voiture ?
est ce que je peux aller à / au ...
est-ce que tu veux sortir avec moi ?
Indeed translated into French is: En effet. It can also be used to say "actually" An example sentence: Il a en effet sortir (He did indeed go out)
go to dictionary.com and click translator and put English to french and put the word or sentence in English then click translate the translation will be in the bottom