Which tense:
Voy (presente de indicativo)
vaya (presente de subjuntivo)
Iba (pretérito imperfecto de indicativo)
Fui (pretérito de indicativo)
fuera / fuese (pretérito imperfecto de subjuntivo)
Fuere (futuro de subjuntivo)
He ido (pretérito perfecto de indicativo)
Hube ido (pretérito anterior)
Hubiere ido (futuro perfecto de subjuntivo)
iré (futuro imperfecto de indicativo)
habré ido (futuro perfecto de indicativo)
haya ido (pretérito perfecto de subjuntivo)
Hubiera / hubiese ido (pretérito pluscuamperfecto de subjuntivo)
HabÃa ido (pretérito pluscuamperfecto de indicativo)
Vaya (imperativo indirecto)
IrÃa (modo potencial simple o condicional simple)
HabrÃa ido (modo potencial compuesto o perfecto / condicional compuesto o perfecto)
It is really something of a complex form, but simply put it is used to express uncertainty in a statement. It is essentially the same as the imperative, except that in the imperative there really is no form for the first person. The present subjunctive is normally formed by switching the normal ar and er/ir endings of a conjugated verb. For example, caminar would be camine, camines, camine, caminemos, caminéis, caminen.
For verbs that are characterized by the first person ending "go" (digo pongo, hago, tengo, etc.), the subjunctive is formed by converting the "go" to "ga". Tenga, tengas, tenga, tengamos, tengáis, tengan.
There are many verbs that are iregular, but that is a good basis to start.
present subjunctive
vaya
vayas
vaya
vayamos
vayáis
vayan
In Spanish there there are four past tenses in the Indicative Mood: preterite (Ex: hablé, hablaste, habló, etc; comí, comiste, comió, etc) imperfect (Ex: hablaba, hablabas, hablaba, etc; comía, comías, comía, etc) present perfect (Ex: he hablado, has hablado, etc) past perfect (Ex: había hablado, habías hablado, etc) And there are three past tenses in the Subjunctive Mood: past subjunctive (Ex: hablara, hablaras, hablara, etc) present perefect subjunctive (Ex: haya hablado, hayas hablado, etc) past perfect subjunctive (hubiera hablado, hubieras hablado, etc)
It could be third person singular, present subjunctive of 'beber' = to drink, i.e. 'drink!' -or- It could be the word 'viva' (often pronounced "biba") which is the third person singular, present subjunctive of 'vivir' = to live, i.e. 'live!' This is often used in the equivalent of the English phrase "long live" as in "Long live the Queen" etc. (Que viva la Reina).
"reces" is the second-person subjunctive of the spanish verb "rezar", which means "to pray".
The word 'pense' is a form of the verb infinitive 'penser'. It's a singular form. It may be in the present or imperative. Within the present tense, it may be either indicative or subjunctive. As a command, it translates as [you] think. As a present indicative, it translates as I am thinking, do think, think, or he/she/it does think, is thinking, thinks. And as a present subjunctive, it translates as [that] I may think or think, [that] he/she/it may think or think.
present indicative is the regular present tense in Spanish. ex: I talk. (yo hablo)
Words that are in the present tense are categorized as a Spanish subjunctive. Any word which is stated in the present is considered a Spanish subjunctive.
It means 'can' or 'is able to'. It comes from the verb: poder and is conjugated in the present subjunctive tense.
debo - present indicative debiendo - gerund debé - preterit deba - subjunctive debiera - imperfect subjunctive debía - imperfect debido - past participle
"Lea" is the formal command (and also the 3rd person singular present subjunctive) meaning "read".
salir = to leave salga = (may you/he/she/it) leave (present subjunctive, third person singular)
Doesn't exist. You may be thinking of "Naden" That is the third person plural present subjunctive of the verb Nadar.
Damos in the indicative and Demos in the imperative and subjunctive are literal Spanish equivalents of the Italian word Diamo. The Italian verb in question serves as the present imperative "(Let us) give!" or the present indicative "We are giving (do give, give)" or the present subjunctive "(That) we may give" depending upon context. The respective pronunciations will be "DA-mos" and "DEY-mos" in Spanish and "DYA-mo" in Italian.
It's TWO Spanish words: ven = come (present subjunctive 'you') aqui = here So the phrase means 'Come here'
First-person singular (yo) present subjunctive form of hallar. Third-person singular (él, ella, also used with usted?) present subjunctive form of hallar. Formal second-person singular (usted) imperative form of hallar.
Firme means sign (your signature).
Aie or ait as a verb and hêtre as a noun are French equivalents of the Spanish word haya. Context makes clear whether the first person present subjunctive "(that) I may have" (case 1), the third person present subjunctive "(that) he (it, one, she) may have" (example 2), or a "beech (tree)" (instance 3) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "eh" for the verb and "eh-truh" for the noun in French and "EYE-a" in Spanish.
The word embarrare does not exist in Latin.In Spanish, it is the first- and third-person singular future subjunctive of the verb embarrar, "to cover with mud". And it is conjugated: embarrare, embarrares, embarrare, embarráremos, embarrareis, embarraren. Actually this tense (future subjunctive) in Spanish has become old-fashioned in spoken Spanish. It is only used in Classic Spanish texts or in certain expressions such as "sea lo que fuere" "Adonde fuereshas lo que vieres (Do what Romans do)". This tense has been replaced by the present subjunctive: embarrara, embarraras... or the past perfect subjunctive: haya embarrado, hayas embarrado...