-AR verbs are not a "tense" in Spanish. They are a category of verbs. Anyway, the "yo" form is made by removing the -AR and replacing it with an -O. Therefore HABLAR becomes YO HABLO.
The present tense of "yo" for -AR verbs is formed by adding the corresponding endings to the verb stem. For example, for the verb "hablar," the present tense of "yo" is "hablo."
The "yo" form of the verb "conocer" in the present tense is "conozco."
The verb "decor" is not a standard verb in Spanish. If you meant "decore" in the present tense, the yo form would be "decore".
The "yo" form of the verb dar in the present tense is "doy."
Yes, "pasear" is a regular -ar verb in Spanish. It follows the typical conjugation pattern for verbs ending in -ar in the present tense, such as "yo paseo," "tú paseas," "él/ella pasea."
Conjugation: empecéNote that the "z" in the root changes to a "c" in front of the "e". Because "ze" is not allowed in Spanish, the "z" transitions to a "ce". This is the same with any verb that ends in "zar" in the preterite tense yo form and in the present subjunctive.
The "yo" form of the verb "conocer" in the present tense is "conozco."
The "yo" form of the verb dar in the present tense is "doy."
In the present tense the verb comprar conjugates as follows: Yo: Compro Tu: Compras El ella usted: Compra nosotros: Compramos Ellos: Compran *** This is for the present tense only!
To use the present tense in Spanish, you conjugate verbs based on the subject pronoun (yo, tú, él/ella/usted, nosotros/nosotras, vosotros/vosotras, ellos/ellas/ustedes). Remove the infinitive ending (-ar, -er, -ir) and add the appropriate ending for each subject. For example, for the verb "hablar" (to speak): yo hablo, tú hablas, él/ella/usted habla, nosotros/nosotras hablamos, vosotros/vosotras habláis, ellos/ellas/ustedes hablan.
Well the verb llevar is a ar verb. The verb llevar meansto wear, to carry. Yo: llevo nosotros(as): llevamos tu: llevas vosotros(as): llevais (a has accent) usted, el, ella: lleva ustedes ellos (as): llevan
Conjugation: empecéNote that the "z" in the root changes to a "c" in front of the "e". Because "ze" is not allowed in Spanish, the "z" transitions to a "ce". This is the same with any verb that ends in "zar" in the preterite tense yo form and in the present subjunctive.
Yes, it is an irregular verb. Because it stem-changes (e-->i), that makes it an irregular verb. No only that, but it has an irregular yo form in the present tense (vengo), which makes it even more irregular.
The appropriate present tense form of "ir" in "yo" is "voy", which means "I go" in English.
I beat your = Yo rompo tuyo (where 'beat' is present tense); Yo rumpí tuyo (where 'beat' is past tense)
Regular verbs in Spanish follow predictable patterns when conjugated, based on their infinitive endings (-ar, -er, -ir). Irregular verbs, on the other hand, do not follow these patterns and must be memorized individually. These irregularities can affect any part of the verb conjugation, including the stem, endings, or both.
yo hablotú hablasél/ella/Usted hablanosotros hablamosvosotros habláisellos/ellas/Ustedes hablan
Yo leo una novela buena (present tense) Yo leí una novela buena (Past tense)