present tense: je voyage - future: je voyagerai.
To read books is his favorite hobby. She went to the store to buy some groceries. The goal is to win the championship. To travel the world is her dream.
The three kinds of verbals are gerund, infinitive, and participle. Gerunds act as a noun but looks like a verb. In the sentence "Swimming is a form of exercise.", swimming is the gerund. Infinitive looks like a verb but used as an adverb, adjective, or noun. It is used together with "to". In the sentence "I don't like to eat that unless my nose is covered.", the infinitive in the sentence is "to eat". Lastly, participle looks like a verb but used as an adjective to describe a noun or pronoun. It ends with -ing, -ed, or -t. In the sentence "The crying and tired employees were sent home after the earthquake.", crying and tired are the participles
No, it should be, "He and Patty love to travel abroad every summer." You need the subjective form (he), and not the objective form (him) for the compound subject of the sentence.An easy way to test whether to use the subjective or objective form of a pronoun is to simplify the sentence so that the correct form is much clearer. Since you would say "He loves to travel abroad" and not "Him loves to travel abroad", you would follow the same pronoun pattern and use "He and Patty love to travel...".An even simpler form for the subject of that sentence is the subjective plural pronoun, "They love to travel abroad every summer."
The infinitives are highlighted in the sentences below.The dog likes to run.The athletes meet every morning to train together.I want to play well at my piano recital.Grandma likes to get flowers on Mother's Day.It's time to think about spring.Do you have to talk during the ceremony?
French people primarily speak French, although some may also speak Spanish or Italian as a second or third language, especially if they have learned it through education or travel. However, the official language in France is French.
"To travel" is an infinitive.
"To travel" is an infinitive.
A split infinitive is a verb that has a word (usually an adverb) between "to" and the main verb.Examples:We like to often travel together.He seemed to really enjoy the trip.
The noun is "safari." The infinitive form of the verb (to travel) is "kusafiri." I travel = Ninasafiri, or nasafiri We travel = Tunasafiri You travel (one person) = Unasafiri You travel (more than one) = Mnasafiri He/she travels = Anasafiri They travel = Wanasafiri
If you mean direction, e.g. 'to London', 'a'; so 'a londres' = 'to London' If you mean the first half of an infinitive, e.g. 'to travel', 'to eat', 'to live', 'to' is communicated by various infinitive endings. For the verbs in question, these are: viajAR = to travel comER = to eat vivIR = to live The infinitive-endings are in capitals simply to clarify them here (though,as it happens, the capitals also indicate the stress on the spoken words).
correct travel sppeed
To love to travel is "aimer voyager" in French. I love to travel is "j'aime voyager".
I travel often is 'je voyage souvent' in French.
No. Nor is it feminine, either. It is the infinitive of a verb (= to travel), which doesn't have masculine and feminine in Spanish.
Viaggiare is an Italian equivalent of the English word "to travel."Specifically, the Italian word is a verb. It is the present form of the infinitive. The pronunciation is vyahdj-DJAH-reh."
"voyager" is to travel in french
The French People Travel on it by canoe,ferry and boat