"Comer" is a noun and doesn't have any tenses.
The preterit tense of "comer" is "comΓ" for the first person singular (yo), and "comiste" for the second person singular (tΓΊ), among others. It is used to talk about actions that were completed in the past.
The preterite tense is a grammatical tense used to describe actions that were completed in the past at a specific point in time. In Spanish, it is characterized by specific verb endings that indicate past actions that are viewed as completed. This tense is commonly used to narrate events or actions that happened at a particular moment in the past.
The preterit tense is used to describe completed actions in the past, while the past participle is used to form compound verb tenses like the present perfect or the past perfect. The preterit is a specific past tense conjugation, while the past participle is a form of the verb that is used with auxiliary verbs.
The spelling "comer" is someone who comes, or the Spanish verb comer, "to eat."Similar words arecoma (koh-ma) - a deep subconscious state, or the head of a cometcomma - the puntuation mark (,)
The Spanish word for "eat" is "comer."
The correct form for the reflexive verb "lavarse" with the subject "nosotros" would be "nos lavamos."
It is the preterit (past) tense.
The preterite tense is a grammatical tense used to describe actions that were completed in the past at a specific point in time. In Spanish, it is characterized by specific verb endings that indicate past actions that are viewed as completed. This tense is commonly used to narrate events or actions that happened at a particular moment in the past.
It is the third-person form of decir in preterit (past) tense, so:He/she/you (formal) said
like im going but wait
"Comiste" is the past tense of the Spanish verb "comer," which means "to eat." It translates to "you ate" in English.
The correct form for the reflexive verb "lavarse" with the subject "nosotros" would be "nos lavamos."
"You said" is dijo (formal preterit) or dijiste (informal preterit)
Past tense. It is one of two Spanish past tenses. The preterit (el pretérito) is used for actions begun and ended in the past. Hablé ayer - I spoke yesterday. The other is the imperfect. (pretérito imperfecto). This is used to describe things in the past that are habitual or continuous action. Hablaba ayer. - I was talking yersterday. Many times translated as "used to." The imperfect is the most regular tense in the Soanish language.
It can be spelled preterit or preterite. (More rarely, you'll see praeterit.)
Yes, the imperfect tense in Spanish is commonly used for narrating past events, especially to describe ongoing or repeated actions in the past, provide background information, or set the scene in a story. It can create a sense of atmosphere or context for the main events of a narrative.
this word sounds like comer " comer'
As written, it could be either "fuiste" or "fuisteis". Both are conjugated forms of the verb "ser" in the preterit tense. Fuiste is "you were" singular. Fuisteis is "you were" plural. Both are informal.