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Can someone please explain what these are and how to use them

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Aller : to go

Va : it's the 3rd person singular of the verb "aller". e.g : il va à la plage, elle va à la maison, on va s'amuser

Vient : it's the 3rd person singular of verb "venir" (to come). e.g : il vient à l'école, elle vient à la maison, on vient ensemble.

 

So firstly, as you're probably aware, in French, verbs change their form, in a vaguely similar way to English and other languages. For example, in English, you would say:

 

He goes to the cinema every Saturday.

He should go to the cinema more often.

 

But you wouldn't say:

 

He go to....

He should goes...

 

In French, "aller", is the equivalent of "go" in the above case. Technically, this form is often referred to as being the "infinitive" form: if you like, it's the form that has "infinite" interpretations because you haven't added an ending to say which person, whether it's past tense etc. (This is actually not really true: even an infinitive narrows down the possible interpretations, but that was the idea behind the term when it was invented.)

 

Meanwhile "va" is the equivalent of "goes": it specifies that whoever or whatever is doing the action of "going" must be somebody/something that can be referred to as "he", "she", "it" (technically what is called "third person singular").

 

The word "vient" is roughly equivalent to "comes", with a similar line of logic; the infinitive form ("come") would be "venir".

 

One thing that can be a bit confusing for English learners is that English doesn't actually make that many distinctions between verb forms. For example, whilst the "-es" is necessary in "he goes", in other cases like "we go", "they go", there's no difference between the form "go", whereas French would make a difference.

@ Erwan, thanks for the quick reply.

@ Neil, Thank you so much.

I'm learning french and this was my 1st post here and it went well.

 

Thanks for the help guys

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