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)
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".
go away
go away
"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.