Jouer
Trouver is to find.
"entourer" (verb) means 'to surround, to come around' in French.
ouvert ouvrir (verb)
Faisons is the first-person plural ("we ...") of the verb faire, which is "to make" or "to do" and also appears, with various translations, in many idioms. For example, nous faisons du sport is "we play sports"; nous faisons partie du club is "we are members of the club."
verbs have no gender in French. Only nouns and adjectives can be masculine or feminine.
Its Jouer.
jouons ! = let's play! - nous jouons = we play / are playing
The verb to play is jouer. This is a regular verb so follows the normal 'er' endings: Je joue Tu joues Elle/Il/On joue Nous jouons Vous jouez Elles/Ils jouent So for 'you' play, this can be said both in singular form and plural. For one person it is, Tu joues And for saying it to several people, Vous jouez
In French, "jouer" is the -ER verb for "to play." ex- Je joue au football.(I play football.)
The verb in French for "to learn" is "Apprendre"
No, but "attendre" is a verb meaning "to wait"
No, "appeler" is a regular -er verb in French. It conjugates according to regular -er verb patterns.
to play = jouerhe/she plays = il/elle joue
That is plomb!
The infinitive verb form means the same thing in all languages (though not all languages have an infinitive). It is simply the base from of a verb.
No, "use" is an English verb (or it can also be a noun). The French version is "utiliser" (verb) and "utilisation" (noun).
The verb is "play" and the verb phrase is "can play."