You take the normal Spanish verb; hablar
the stem of the word is "habla" and take of the o
if you are conjugating using the word I, follow these directions
1. take habla and add "o" to the end of habl
2. put yo in front of it
3. ends up being "hablo" which means "I Talk"
Or another exampl is the word beber, which means to drink. If you yourself are saying
it, you would change it to bebo. Which means I drink.
Just take into account some irregularities, for example:
"Ir"
Voy (I go), vas, va, vamos, vais, van (presente de indicativo), and so forth.
You conjugate a verb by listing its forms according to person, number, tense and mood. The verb "to be" is conjugated in the present tense, indicative mood:
Singular
I am
you are
he, she, or it is
Plural
we are
you are
they are
Estar - to be
Estoy ('yo' form)
estas ('tu' form)
esta ('el/ella')
estamos ('ustds.')
estan ('nosotros')
My answer: He said the verb "to be". He didn't say the Spanish verb of "to be". Here is the conjugation below:
to be: infinitive
am: first person singular present indicative
are: plural present indicative and second person singular indicative
is: third person singular present indicative
was: first and third person singular past indicative
were: past subjunctive, past plural indicative, and second person singular past indicative
be: present subjunctive, bare infinitive, and imperative
been: past participle
being: present participle and gerund
art: archaic second person singular present indicative (used with "thou")
wast: archaic second person singular past indicative
wert: archaic second person singular past indicative and subjunctive
beest: archaic dialectal second person singular present subjunctive
Unlike French or Spanish, which are inflectional languages, English is a syncretic language so its conjugations are pretty flat. With that said, here goes with the verb "to spend":
Infinitive: to spend
Gerund: spending
Present Participle: spending
Past Participle: spent
Imperative: spend (for all persons)
Simple Present Indicative: [Ex. My wife spends too much money.]
Simple Past Indicative: [Ex. My wife spent too much money at the store yesterday.]
Simple Present Subjunctive: [Ex. I prefer that my wife not spend money at all.]
Simple Past Subjunctive: [Ex. If my wife spent less money, we could buy a new car.]
Simple Future Indicative: [Ex. My wife will spend a lot of money this week.]
Simple Future Subjunctive: [If my wife were to spend all of my money, I'd be broke.]
Present Perfect Indicative: [Ex. My wife has spent all of my money.]
Present Perfect Subjunctive: [Ex. It's important that my wife have spent no money.]
Past Perfect Indicative: [Ex. My wife had spent all of my money before I could stop her.]
Past Perfect Subjunctive: [Ex. If my wife had spent all of my money, I would have killed her.]
Present Progressive Indicative: [Ex. My wife is spendingmoney like water.]
Present Progressive Subjunctive: [It's vital that my wife be spending very little.]
Past Progressive Indicative: [Ex. My wife was spendingmoney like water.]
Past Progressive Subjunctive: [Ex. If my wife were spending money like water, I'd scream.]
Present Perfect Progressive Indicative: [Ex. My wife has been spending all of my money for years.]
Present Perfect Progressive Subjunctive: [Ex. Although my wife have been spending my money like water, I can still say that I love her with all of my heart.]
See how simple this is? I could write the different tenses all day, but I shan't. It would take too long if I did. Here are examples of the above tenses and other tenses with explanations of what they are:
Some of the ones listed above are very formal English, but you get the idea. None are incorrect, but border on usage. In the end, these are just examples of English conjugations. It's not that difficult.
Anyway, moving on. Here are some examples using some archaic second person pronouns "thou" and "ye" with a cursory explanation of their uses. Technically they're not archaic because everyone in Modern English knows what they mean, but they are no longer in vogue nor are they required in prescriptive grammar. If they were archaic, you wouldn't know what they mean, which can happen when reading Chaucer or Shakespeare. Anyway, here goes:
"Thou" is nominative singular. It later became comparible with the French "tu", which is used to talk to a friend. This meant you wouldn't say this to your boss or your mother-in-law. This was said to a close buddy or someone whom you worked with. "Ye" was the plural nominative of what is today "you" or "you all". It was also a singular "you" when talking to your boss or mother-in-law. Later, "ye" had turned into "you" as the nominative case even before "you" replaced "thou". Since we still use these pronouns in old literature and nothing is older than The Bible itself, without further adieu, here goes:
Okay so "thee" is accusative/dative and "thy/thine" are genitive whereas "you" is accusative/dative and "your/yours" are genitive. Also, for conjugational purposes, there is the old -eth or -th ending for third person singular present indicative ONLY:
The reason I am showing this "thou/ye" and -eth ending in 3rd person singular is because we still use this in literature and for rhetorical and humorous effect in Modern English; therefore it's a type of conjugation since "thou" has its own conjugation and the old -eth -th endings for 3rd person singular are still seen as well. This makes them a Modern English conjugation. You may not think so, but look at word conjugations in English from circa AD 1100 and you will agree with me because you won't understand what it even says. You understand this so it is still MODERN ENGLISH. It's just used for effect now rather than common speech.
Conjugate means to change, and to conjugate a verb is to change the verb form.
For example, the verb to have can be conjugated as
I have
you have
he/she has
we have
they have
And the verb to be can be conjugated as
I am
you are
he is
we are
they are
For all regular -er verbs in spanish they have the same endings. In the present tense they conjugate as follows:
The yo form ends in -o
The tú form ends in -es
The él, ella, usted form ends in -e
The nosotros form ends in -emos
Vosotros form - éis
The ustedes / ellos form ends in -en.
**This is only for regular -er verbs in the present tense.
The verb "to fly" has an irregular conjugation.
Present tense: fly, flies
Past tense : flew
Past participle : flown (used with have/has or be/been for other tenses)
i.e. I fly, he flies / I flew, you flew, he flew / I have flown
Yo soy
Tú eres
Él, ella, usted es
Nosotros somos
Vosotros sois
Ellos, ellas, ustedes son
I just covered the present here.
Follow the model of "partir", taking into account the huge irregularities that Spanish verbs can have.
i could you could
You don't, as it's not a verb, it's a noun.
The verb is "tiene," which is the third person singular conjugate of the verb "tener" which means "to have."
You need to conjugate verbs in most languages. Whether you realize it or not, you conjugate verbs in English as well as in French. Use the French verb "avoir" for example. "j'ai" translates to "I have", and "il a" translates to "he has". If you didn't conjugate it and just left it as "j'avoir" then that would translate to "I to have" which is obviously incorrect.
yes fly is a verb kasam sy :P lol
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
i could you could
To conjugate a verb is to change it to fit the sentence. To conjugate run you could say: I run, He/She runs, We run, They run. Conjugation in the English language usually only applies to the He/She form as said.
the verb is pleurer so then you have to conjugate it
danser is the verb - you have to conjugate it.
It is the formation or extinct of a link or connection between things in particular.
I suggest that you have a look at - www.leconjugueur.com
Conjugate the verb " to be" I am you are he, she or it, is But seriously Be Being been
"Our" is not a verb. It has no conjugation. The Spanish equivalent of "our" is "nuestro/a".
You don't, as it's not a verb, it's a noun.
Viajar. This is the verb "to travel". You need to conjugate the verb depending on who is traveling.
To conjugate the progressive tenses, conjugate only the part of the tense phrase that is part of the conjugation the verb "to be" and add to that the present participle of the principal verb. Example with principal verb "go": "I am going, I was going, I have been going, I had been going" for the first person singular present, past, present perfect, and past perfect tenses respectively.