It depends on what you are trying to say.
If you are referring to the past tense of "to see", it would be "ver" conjugated for the appropriate person, i.e. vi, viste, vio, vimos, visteis, vieron.
If you are referring to the tool that cuts objects, it would be "la sierra".
It depends on what you are trying to say.
If you are referring to the past tense of "to see", it would be "ver" conjugated for the appropriate person, i.e. vi, viste, vio, vimos, visteis, vieron.
If you are referring to the tool that cuts objects, it would be "la sierra" or "el serrucho".
It depends on what you are trying to say.
If you are referring to the past tense of "to see", it would be tú viste, Ud. vio, vosotros visteis, or Uds. vieron depending on which "you" you are referring to.
If you are referring to the present tense of "to cut with a saw", it would be tú sierras, Ud. sierra vosotros serráis, or Uds. sierran depending on which "you" you are referring to.
vi a su nena
In the case of I have seen it would be "yo vi" the verb ver is "to see" in spanish. vi is the singular past tense conjugation. For a saw that cuts use sierra to say I am cutting with a saw I'd say yo sierra utilizo...the singular form of utilizar but there is probably a better way to say this.
Sierra is a Spanish word meaning 'saw'. Since a mountain range resembles a saw with the mountains forming the teeth, it also figuratively means 'mountain range'.
"Veíamos "el gato en botas" en tres dimensiones".
Sister in law in Spanish is cunada.
Me viste en la escuela - You saw me in school.
Te vi hoy.
Yo ya lo vi.
vi a su nena
Translation: Acabo de ver
Translation: Lo vi OR Lo he visto.
Translation: Cuando yo caminaba, vi...
In the case of I have seen it would be "yo vi" the verb ver is "to see" in spanish. vi is the singular past tense conjugation. For a saw that cuts use sierra to say I am cutting with a saw I'd say yo sierra utilizo...the singular form of utilizar but there is probably a better way to say this.
you can say "y tambien ví baños para hombres y mujeres."
Translation: Desde la primera vez que te he visto...
Sierra is a Spanish word meaning 'saw'. Since a mountain range resembles a saw with the mountains forming the teeth, it also figuratively means 'mountain range'.
Same way in English, only with softer A's SAW-VAWN-AW, i guess is how an English speaking person would say it