I love you a lot, my dear, yes, I am going to marry you, I want to spend my entire life with only you, my dearly beloved, i wait for you
It can mean, "leave" however, in the context I think you're thinking of, it means nothing. It's just a random word added to the end of a sentence, no? According to Pimsleur's Japanese course, Level 2, Unit 11, demasu means "leave". In course Level 3, Unit 15, demasu can also mean "attend" (such as attend a meeting). Demasen = not attend, deraremasu = can attend, deraremasen = cannot attend.
I attend school in spanish could be "yo asisto a la escuela" or "yo asisto al colegio"
Para atender.
Marina Dicocco is a graduate of Our Lady of Lourdes high school in Poughkeepsie, New York. She received a scholarship in 2012 to attend the University of Massachusetts .
RSVP is an abbreviation asking you to reply, often to an invitation. In many cases the invitation carries a stub with the number of persons who will attend (or decline to attend) the event and you just send that back. In the other cases you often indicate through the contact provided (phone number, mail address), what is your response to the answer on the invitation. Common replies are extremely various. That may be : 'cher ami, je ne pourrai malheureusement pas être présent pour ... ' (Dear, I regretfully won't be able to attend ... (event) or 'nous viendrons tous les deux avec plaisir' (we will both be here). Short and simple answers are common and perfectly acceptable.
If you mean "It is possible that you will be able to attend," use Possibly, you may attend. The word possibly is not necessary: its doubtful meaning is included in the form "may attend." Therefore, we make it absolute, separated from the grammar of the sentence by the comma.
In this sentence, 'attend' is used in the future tense.
You mustn't attend your class.
Hmm, let me see. "Will you attend the wedding this afternoon?" "I have to attend an important meeting soon."
I will attend the meeting as soon as I finish this spreadsheet. The hotel assigned a concierge to attend to our needs.
Example sentence - I want to attend an Ivy League university.
It is obligatory for us to attend school.
The letter "I" makes the word "I" and can be put before "attend" to make the sentence "I attend".
This is a correct sentence according to English. This means he can attend from Monday.
Where did you attend college? (You did attend college where?)where - adverb, modifies the verb 'did attend';did - auxiliary verb;you - personal pronoun, subject of the sentence;attend - main verb;college - noun, direct object of the verb 'did attend'.
present
Heed, attend to