= Swimming
déménager, changer de maison
(Some) 'er' verbs: aimer, bouger, coucher, donner, doubler, irriter, jouer, laver, lever, manger, nager, passer, rester.
Generally we refer to the English spoken in the British Isles as "British English," but the distinction could be made between various forms of it: Irish English, Scottish English and English English.
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
= Swimming
j'aime beaucoup nager
Edward Nager was born in 1927.
Oui, je vais aller nager / j'irai nager.
''I love to swim'' J'aime nager, or J'aime la natation
Nager is to swim.'J'aime nager' is 'I like to swim.''J'aime nager avec mes amies' is 'I like to swim with my friends.'"la natation" (feminine noun) is swimming as a sport.
Je suis allé nager with an acute accent on the e.
to swim
To swim upstream: nager à contre-courant, nager en remontant le courant.
nagé is the past tense and that goes with the auxiliary verb "Avoir" but to swim as an infinitive is nager
The cast of Sager der nager - 2009 includes: Mette Lysdahl as Liselotte
Nageant is a French equivalent of 'swimming'. It's the present participle of the infinitive 'nager', which means 'to swim'. It's pronounced 'nah-zhaw'*.*The sound is somewhat similar to the sound 'aw' in the English adjective 'raw' or the English noun 'lawn'.