From the verb estudiar. First person singular. Estudio. Ess-STU-dee-oh
yo estudio
estudié
"Have you studied English?" in Spanish is "ΒΏHas estudiado inglΓ©s?"
You could say "Estudié mucho"
fo shizzle my nizzle in da hizzle
pray
He estudiado el espanol en la escuela secundaria y en la universidad. For "universidad" you can say "colegio" in some countries. In others, it means Middle School.
You would say "I studied French last year."
Hernan Cortes studied law before becoming a Spanish conquistador and explorer.
He studied for it = Er hat dafür studiert
When two sentences are separated by only a comma, this is called a "comma splice", and it is not correct. The correct punctuation is either a semicolon instead of a comma, or to keep the two as separate sentences, each ending in a period.ExamplesComma splice, incorrect: Carla studied Spanish, Peter studied German.Semicolon, correct: Carla studied Spanish; Peter studied German.Two sentences, correct: Carla studied Spanish. Peter studied German.You can also use a coordinating conjunction like "and" to "fix" a comma splice:Carla studied Spanish, and Peter studied German.Note: A similar punctuation error in which two sentences are joined together with no punctuation between them is called a run-on sentence:Carla studied Spanish Peter studied German.
It is not correct to say "they has studied". The correct way is to say "they have studied." There are many different places that a person can check grammar questions such as English grammar websites.
The Apostles did write down things that happened to Jesus and what he did so you can say he was studied.
Researched