I'll call you soon. Je vous appellerai bientôt.
I'll call you back. Je t'appellerai.
I'm gonna call you later. Je t'appelle plus tard. I'll call you later. Je te rappelle.
I'll call you when I'm finished. Quand j'ai fini, je vous appelle.
j'ai essayé de t'appeler.
Translation of "call me later" in French. All right, call me later. Très bien, appelle-moi plus tard.
Call me, please. Appelle-moi, s'il te plaît.
As with English, French people tend to reply to Ça va? with a positive response – Bien, or Bien, merci – much the same way as we would use fine in English. The following responses are polite enough for a new acquaintance, but general enough for a good friend, too: Très bien, merci. Very well, thank you.
Will you call me later, please? Tu m'appelles plus tard, s'il te plaît.
Should I call you later? Dois-je t'appeler plus tard?
“Always me”—that's what toujours moi means—and it's true.
Literally, “how do you go?”.
Scenario 3: it could mean “It's right” / “It's correct“. For example, someone asks: “C'est bon ce que j'ai fait ?” (Is what I did correct?) and you can answer “Oui, c'est bon” (Yes, it's correct).
Je serai bientôt de retour. I will be back soon.
3 - How to forgive someone in French
Let's say someone told you “Pardon”, “Excuse-moi” or “Je suis désolé.” How can you react? What should you say? Well, the easiest answer is Ça ne fait rien (= that's nothing).
Au revoir.
(Oh reh-vwah) This is the most common ways of saying goodbye in French, and it's acceptable for the vast majority of situations, formal and informal. It literally means “until we each see each other again.
The usual response to merci is de rien (You're welcome – literally, It's nothing) or il n'y a pas de quoi. In a more formal context, you could say Je vous en prie or Je t'en prie.
Merci (mekh*-see)
Merci is the most common way to say “thank you” in French.