then you have to say "tutéame"
Will you invite Juan and Alberto to your house?
Tu (informal) commands have the same conjugation as tu in the present tense.
Use "Le necessito" (pronounce lay neh-say-see-toe) when addressing someone formally. When addressing someone you know, like a friend or relation, use "Te necessito." Yo necessito tu is another form, but much longer. (There should also be a accent mark over the "u" in tu)
It means: Are you? There is actually supposed to be question mark after that phrase, you can only use it in a question form. - Es-tu un membre d'equipe? (Are you a member of the team?). It is usually tu es, but when you are asking a question, you reverse the order and put a hyphen in between. Tu means you Es means are! Therefore es - tu? means - are you? Hope this helped!
Amuse-toi !
tu invites is 'you are inviting' (someone to come over, or someone to a lunch, ...)
Your home is 'ta maison / votre maison' in French.
You would use "vous"."Vous" is the plural OR formal "you", so you use it when you are talking to someone older, or a stranger, or someone who has a different social position, like your boss."Tu" is singular AND informal. Use "tu" when you are among friends, peers, and addressing a single person at a time.
You would use "vous"."Vous" is the plural OR formal "you", so you use it when you are talking to someone older, or a stranger, or someone who has a different social position, like your boss."Tu" is singular AND informal. Use "tu" when you are among friends, peers, and addressing a single person at a time.
There are two main ways to say this in Spanish: "Puedo tener......" --> Can I have... and "Me puede(s) dar......" --> Can you give me..... Depending on who you are talking to would depend on if you would use the Usted form (Puede) or the tu form (Puedes). If you are talking to a waiter or someone who is of higher class or age then you, you would use the Usted form. If you are just talking to a friend or sibling, you could use the Tu form.
"Vous êtes en retard" or "Tu es en retard" Which one you use would depend on whom you were speaking to. Generally speaking, if you were speaking to a boss, teacher, or someone you don't know well, you'd use the first (with Vous) and to a friend or close family member, you'd use the "tu" form.
Yes, and depending the country, is less or more offensive. In Spain, for example is completely common to use "tu".
Will you invite Juan and Alberto to your house?
French has two forms for "you". You can give offence if you get it wrong. Tu is the singular form, but it is also the familiar form. It is used when talking to a relative, a close friend, a child or an animal; also when talking to God if you are a Protestant. In the classroom a teacher addresses a pupil as tu, but woe betide the pupil who says tu to the teacher. Vous is the plural form but also the polite or respectful form. It is used when talking to more than one person, or to someone who does not qualify for tu. Many people use vous even when talking to a relative or friend who is from an older generation. Catholics use vous when talking to God.
It sounds like voo It is tu if y7ou are talking to someone younger vous=polite manner tu=familliar use
"Montar" in the "tu" form in Spanish is "montas."
Où-es tu?