they (girls) are students in the same (senior high) school.
They are in the classroom.
elles sont mean they (feminine) are
How to conjugate regular French verbs in the present tense: ER Verbs Danser- to Dance Je Dans(e) Tu Dans(es) Il Dans(e) Elle Dans(e) On Dans(e) Qui Danse? Nous Dans(ons) Vous Dans(ez) Ils Dans(ent) Elles Dans(ent) IR Verbs Finir- To Finish Je Fin(is) Tu Fin(is) Il Fin(it) Elle Fin(it) On Fin(it) Qui Fin(it)? Nous Fin(issons) Vous Fin(issez) Ils Fin(issent) Elles Fin(issent) RE Verbs Entendre- To Hear Je Entend(s) Tu Entend(s) Il Entend() Elle Entend() On Entend() Qui Entend()? Nous Entend(ons) Vous Entend(ez) Ils Entend(ent) Elles Entend(ent) Note: If you do not conjugate a verb it will always mean to (something) Example: If you leave the ER ending on Manger it will mean "to eat", so leaving the ending (ER, IR, RE) on a verb will in translation mean: to (something) P.S. Manger is a common irregular verb. This is because when you conjugate manger in nous it turns, Nous mang(eons) instead of Nous mang(ons).
They went out
'dans' eans 'in'
(ils/elles) connaissent - (they) know
Je vais dans mean I'm going in.
danser means "to dance", but the verb is usually conjugated with I, he/she, you, we, plural you, and they: je danse (I dance) il/elle danse (he/she dances) tu danses (you dance) nous dansons (we dance) vous dansez (pl. you dance) ils/elles dansent (m. they/ f. they dance)
'dans' eans 'in'
You meant: Ellos - They, masc. Ellas - they, fem. Elle --- digraph "ll" in Spanish. 'elles' is French for 'they' (feminine plural)
It means "they" referring to a feminine plural noun. French nouns have masculine or feminine genders. "Elles" is the plural form of "She".
"They (fem.) are clean"