It is the second infinitive that tells you what the person is actually going to do, but it is the verb aller, as the first verb in the sentence, that will be conjugated to match the subject. You have ...It is the second infinitive that tells you what the person is actually going to do, but it is the verb aller, as the first verb in the sentence, that will be conjugated to match the subject. You have already seen and heard the verb faire many times in questions: if someone asks "Qu'est-ce que vous faites?" ("What are you doing?"), you usually reply not with the verb faire itself, but with the verb that describes the activity you are doing.
It is the second infinitive that tells you what the person is actually going to do, but it is the verb aller, as the first verb in the sentence, that will be conjugated to match the subject. You have ...It is the second infinitive that tells you what the person is actually going to do, but it is the verb aller, as the first verb in the sentence, that will be conjugated to match the subject. You have already seen and heard the verb faire many times in questions: if someone asks "Qu'est-ce que vous faites?" ("What are you doing?"), you usually reply not with the verb faire itself, but with the verb that describes the activity you are doing.