Yes, of course!
Stay(Present)= Quedarse/ se queda
Stayed(Past)= se quedo
Had Stayed(Pluperfect)= Se habia quedado
Examples:
Andrea stays in my house.= Andrea se queda en mi casa.
Ana stayed in Carla's house.= Ana se quedo en la casa de Carla.
Alejandro had stayed near Paola.= Alejandro se habia quedado cerca Paola.
In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".
"Hacer" is the Spanish verb meaning "to make" or "to do".
The present tense of the verb "stay" is "stay". For example, "I stay at home on weekends."
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
The verb stay is an action verb.
as far as I know, there is no chaver verb in spanish ...check the spelling
The past is stayed.
The verb in Spanish for "to go" is "ir". It is an EXTREMELY irregular verb, and most of the conjugations look noting like the base verb.
Dando - from the verb Dar -to give
No, the Spanish verb "estudiar" is not irregular. It follows the regular conjugation pattern for verbs ending in -ar.
The verb "to love" in Spanish is "amar".