I passed this question by 5 Spanish Professors at UGA (University of Georgia) and no-one could come up with an infinitive form of a verb that ends with -ie.
There are two of them ser and estar. Ser is used to talk about characteristics and origin. While estar talks about temporary condition, action in progress, temporary location.
To boil is: hervir. It is an e to ie stem changing verb.
Hervir is an un-conjugated verb, meaning that is has no tense. (ie. Past Tense, Present Progressive, Future, etc.)The direct translation of hervir would be "to boil".
The Spanish verb for "celebrate" is "celebrar".
"Salir" is the Spanish verb meaning "to go out".
spanish noun- eclipse verb - eclipsar
The Spanish word "comenzar" translates to "to begin" in English. It is a verb used to indicate the start of an action or process.
To boil is: hervir. It is an e to ie stem changing verb.
"Be" is the verb, ie to be. "May" changes the tense of the verb. Similar to "have been" or "will be".
"Be" is the verb, ie to be. "May" changes the tense of the verb. Similar to "have been" or "will be".
"Hacer" is the Spanish verb meaning "to make" or "to do".
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
Hervir is an un-conjugated verb, meaning that is has no tense. (ie. Past Tense, Present Progressive, Future, etc.)The direct translation of hervir would be "to boil".
No. Estudiar is a regular verb in Spanish. When conjugating this verb it follows all the rules for -ar verbs.
as far as I know, there is no chaver verb in spanish ...check the spelling
The verb in Spanish for "to go" is "ir". It is an EXTREMELY irregular verb, and most of the conjugations look noting like the base verb.
e- ie