Active:
Indicative: ferio, feris, ferit, ferimus, feritis, feriunt
Subjunctive: feriam, ferias, feriat, feriamus, feriatis, feriant
Passive:
Indicative: ferior, feriris, feritur, ferimur, ferimini, feriuntur
Subjunctive: feriar, feriaris, feriatur, feriamur, feriamini, feriantur
weaved
Assuming that you are referring to the present indicative tense/mood, it would be "tú te acuestas".
The verb "to be," would conjugate in the present tense as: "I am," "you are," "he (or she) is," "we are," and "they are." In English there is not a different plural form for the second person; "you" can be either singular or plural, depending on the context.
A tense sign in latin is a letter of group of letters that indicates what tense (perfect, imperfect, present, ect.) the word is. The tense of the verb tells if the verb happened in the past, present, or future.
= jugar - infinitive==juego/juegas/juega/jugamos/jugais/juegan - present tense=
Traer in the present tense: yo traigo, tú traes, él/ella/Ud. trae, nosotros traemos, vosotros traéis, ellos/ellas/Uds. traen.
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
In the present tense the verb comprar conjugates as follows: Yo: Compro Tu: Compras El ella usted: Compra nosotros: Compramos Ellos: Compran *** This is for the present tense only!
tense
tense
It depends on how you conjugate it. Je a tu as il/elle/on a nous avons vous avez Ils/Elles on
To conjugate the progressive tenses, conjugate only the part of the tense phrase that is part of the conjugation the verb "to be" and add to that the present participle of the principal verb. Example with principal verb "go": "I am going, I was going, I have been going, I had been going" for the first person singular present, past, present perfect, and past perfect tenses respectively.