il doit s'en aller, il doit partir
'go away' is translated "va t'en" in French. (or "allez vous-en" when you address several people at once)
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".
"She will go" in French is "Elle ira."
translation is: vas t'en! or eloignes toi!
To say "go downstairs" in French, you would say "descends les escaliers."
go away
Hiver, vas-t'en
Ours, vas-t'en
'go away' is translated "va t'en" in French. (or "allez vous-en" when you address several people at once)
go away
go away
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".
"She will go" in French is "Elle ira."
translation is: vas t'en! or eloignes toi!
To say "go downstairs" in French, you would say "descends les escaliers."
aller is how you say go in french. x
to go up the stairs is 'monter les escaliers' in French.