In the present tense:
I am
you are
he/she/it is
we are
you are
they are
In the past tense:
I was
you were
he/she/it was
we were
you were
they were
In the future tense
I will be
you will be
he/sh/it will be
we will be
you will be
they will be
The verb "to be" is irregularly conjugated in English. In present tense, it conjugates as: I am, you are, he/she/it is, we are, they are. In past tense, it conjugates as: I was, you were, he/she/it was, we were, they were.
In Spanish, an indirect object pronoun usually comes before a conjugated verb, while a direct object pronoun can come either before a conjugated verb or be attached to an infinitive or gerund.
No, "sees" is not a singular verb. It is the third person singular form of the verb "see."
In Vietnamese, verbs are not conjugated based on the subject of the sentence. However, there are markers used to indicate verb tenses, aspects, and moods. The basic form of the verb remains the same regardless of the subject.
"I have walked to school every day this week."
Direct object pronouns can be attached to an infinitive verb in Spanish when the infinitive is preceded by a conjugated verb. This is a common structure in Spanish known as the "infinitive construction." This typically happens in sentences where the direct object pronoun refers to the same person or thing as the subject of the conjugated verb.
"Is" is a conjugated verb--it comes from the infinitive "to be", or just "be"."Is" is conjugated in the third person singular--you use it with "he" or "she".
"Yo soy" IS conjugated. It is the conjugated form of the verb "Ser"
be, being, were, am, are
It is a conjugated form of the English verb "to have", so yes.
Regular verbs follow a standard conjugation pattern when changing tenses (e.g. walk, walked, walking). Irregular verbs do not follow this pattern and have unique conjugations for different tenses (e.g. go, went, going).
The verb to have is conjugated as follows in the simple present: I have - you have - he/she/it has - we have - you have - they have
The verb, not conjugated is: fermer
No, "sees" is not a singular verb. It is the third person singular form of the verb "see."
Yes, a verb that comes before the relative pronoun 'qui' tends to be conjugated. The conjugation of a verb shows the forms that the verb takes through different persons, numbers, tenses and moods. A verb that's in its unconjugated form is in the infinitive.
Yes, be is the infinitive of the verb.This is the verb that is conjugated to form, for example:I amYou areShe isWe were
Poder is the un-conjugated verb for "to be able". So that would most likely be the best verb in this case.
Connaitre is the verb, to know. Reconnaitre is the verb, to remember or recall. It is conjugated the same way as Connaitre