Something wrong?
ça ne VA pas? - things aren't going well (with you?)
depend the context: "Ca va", "Ce n'est pas grave.", "Ne t'en fais pas", "pas de problème"
"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."
Don't go to bed to late
You can reply with "Ça va bien, merci!" if you're feeling good, or simply "Ça va" if you want to keep it casual. If you're not feeling well, you might say "Ça ne va pas très bien" to indicate that things aren't great. Feel free to ask the person how they are doing in return!
I'm not okay... so when someone asks u ca va? (roughly translated, are u okay?) u either reply with 'ca va' meaning :-), or 'ca ne va pas" meaning :-(
ça ne VA pas? - things aren't going well (with you?)
ça ne va pas
No, that will not do. No, that's not alright. No, I don't like it. (it depends on the context).
I always think of you when I'm down
depend the context: "Ca va", "Ce n'est pas grave.", "Ne t'en fais pas", "pas de problème"
Mais si, ca VA bien. Et ca te VA bien ou non? A bientot!
It is French for "why you are not well".
"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."
Don't go to bed to late
She's not going to Spain tomorrow.
"It isn't going well!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Ça ne va pas! The declaration translates literally as "That doesn't go!" in English. The pronunciation will be "san va pa" in northerly French and "sa nuh va pas" in southerly French.