Je vais
Tu vas
Il/Elle/On/Qui va
Nous allons
Vous allez
Ils/Elles vont
For example:
Je vais jouer au tennis samedi.
On va au parc ce weekend?
Oui, nous allons aller samedi tôt matin.
Conjuguer is a French equivalent of the English word "conjugate."Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the infinitive in its present form. The pronunciation will be "koh-zhyoo-ghey" in French.
va is a form of the verb "aller", meaning to go. Il va, elle va: he goes, she goes.
Irregular ER verbs in French have unique conjugations that do not follow the standard pattern. Common irregular ER verbs include "aller" (to go) and "aller" (to be). It is important to memorize the specific conjugations for each irregular ER verb.
Yes. Ex: J'y suis, j'y reste (here I am, here I stay) - Je vais y aller (I'm going to go there - before the verb aller) - elle y pense souvent (she often thinks about it)
The verb for "je vais" is "aller," which means "to go" in English.
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.
danser is the verb - you have to conjugate it.
the verb is pleurer so then you have to conjugate it
I suggest that you have a look at - www.leconjugueur.com
Conjuguer is a French equivalent of the English word "conjugate."Specifically, the French word is a verb. It is the infinitive in its present form. The pronunciation will be "koh-zhyoo-ghey" in French.
Going to in french is : verb aller + verb infinitive,example: Je vais faire mon devoir(V.aller)+(V.infinitive)And verb aller in french has many forms with every subject :je vais, nous allonstu vas, vous allezil/elle va ,ils/elles vont
You need to conjugate verbs in most languages. Whether you realize it or not, you conjugate verbs in English as well as in French. Use the French verb "avoir" for example. "j'ai" translates to "I have", and "il a" translates to "he has". If you didn't conjugate it and just left it as "j'avoir" then that would translate to "I to have" which is obviously incorrect.
va is a form of the verb "aller", meaning to go. Il va, elle va: he goes, she goes.
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
Irregular ER verbs in French have unique conjugations that do not follow the standard pattern. Common irregular ER verbs include "aller" (to go) and "aller" (to be). It is important to memorize the specific conjugations for each irregular ER verb.
In French, "go boating" can be translated as "aller en bateau." The verb "aller" means "to go" and "en bateau" means "by boat" or "boating." So, the phrase "go boating" would be "aller en bateau" in French.
The verb suggested is suggérer.You would have to conjugate it and put it in the past tense.