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".
You say "He is French" by saying "Il est français" in French.
tu peux/vous pouvez if you say tu your saying it to one specific person but if you say vous then your saying you plurel
you go/you are going (singular) - it should be - tu vas
"French bye" is not a common phrase. It could potentially refer to saying goodbye in French, which is "au revoir".
Mais is French for but (as in "It was good but it's over now." not "I have a hairy butt.")
In Doctor Who, season 4, episode 10, Title Midnight, The doctor explains Allonsy* by saying, Doctor:Allonsy!* Other:Pardon? Doctor:It's french for let's go. (smiles) *or Allonz-y, Allon-y, or any other way of saying it
Allons-y is a way of saying "Let's go!" in French.
If someone asks you to do something with them like Allons au parc! (Let's go to the park!), you can accept by saying any of the following:D'accord! (Okay!)Bonne idée! (Good idea!)Je voudrais bien. (I'd really like to.)Pourquoi pas? (Why not?)
The French word for house is 'maison'.
Saying hello in french is Bonjour
"Non merci" is the way of saying 'no thank you' in French.
de la mer is French for of the sea.
The British call "french fries" "Chips".
bab.la is the french way of saying haircut
"La classe" is French for "class"
She is saying, in French, "My son wants a green balloon."
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