Let's go
"Allons-y au bar" would work.
It should be: "Allons-y", and it means, "Lets go". It's the Imperative (Command) form of the verb "Aller" (to go).
"Let's go! Let the good times roll with me!" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Allons! Laissez les bons temps rouler avec moi! The exclamatory statements most famously serve as a variation on the popular Cajun French song from Louisiana. The pronunciation will be "a-lo leh-sey ley bo taw roo-ley a-vek mwa" in French.
aller je vais tu vas on VA nous allons vous allez ils vont imperfect - j'allais, tu allais... passé composé - je suis allé(e), tu es allé(e)... future - j'irai, tu iras... subjunctive - que j'aille, que tu ailles, que nous allions... imperative - VA ! allons ! allez ! present participle - allant
do you mean 'pont', which means 'bridge' in French?
Allons! in French means "Let's go!" in English.
Allons-y is a way of saying "Let's go!" in French.
allons à ... allons au ...
nous allons apprendre
You should say Allons-y, which literally means "Let's go there" or "Let's go to it". In French grammar, the verb "aller" needs a place or verb to follow it. The "y" is the French pronoun for "there", so it fills the "place requirement".
The word 'allons' is in the first person plural, whose subject is the equivalent of the English 'we, us'. The word is in the imperative form of command. And its meaning is Let's go.
(nous) allons means '(we) are going. (Nous) allions means (we) went.
Nous allons,Which, with a verb in the Infinitive, can be used for"I'm Going To (Verb)"
nous allons nous allons au marché : we're going to the market
Allons!
we are going is spelled "nous allons" in French
It's actually 'allons-y' and it's French for 'let's go'.