I want to go home
Je veux aller en vacances.
to want. "veux" comes from the infinitive "vouloir", and has the ending used when referring to "je" (me) or "tu" (you)
In French Je means I. Aller is a verb which means to go. In the French language you must conjugate the verbs so that the verb agrees with the first person, third person, etc. Since Je means I and aller means to go, the proper way to say I go would be to write Je vais. Je aller really means nothing.
I want to leave this place.
I don't want to be rich.
"je veux aller à la maison / rentrer à la maison"
I want to go to the disco
"je veux" I want to go to ... = je veux aller à ...
Je veux aller
"finalement je rentre à la maison" (you took the decision after much dithering / hesitating) "je rentre enfin à la maison" (you would have gone home earlier but it wasn't possible)
"I want to go to the restroom"
"Je veux aller avec toi"
"I want to go..." is an English equivalent of the French phrase "Je veux aller... ."Specifically, the subject pronoun "je" means "I." The verb "veux" means "(I) am wanting/wishing, do want/wish, want/wish." The infinitive "aller" means "to go."The pronunciation is "zhuh vuh-zah-leh."
"I want to come with you" in French is "Je veux venir avec toi."
Je veux aller nager
je veux aller à Paris
Je veux aller au cinéma.