The first person plural for 'you walk' is 'we walk'.
The pronoun 'you' is both singular and plural, second person, the person spoken to.
The first person is the person speaking; the plural is the speaker and one or more other people, 'we'.
The 1st person plural form of "you walk" is "we walk."
Don't know what an insubordinate clause is, but I do know that "was" is singular, and "were" is plural. 2nd person (you) is an exception, you use "were" in both singular and plural: You were (singular, one person) You were (plural, all of you) Otherwise, like I said, you just use "was" in 1st person and 3rd person singular, and "were" in 1st and 3rd plural: I was (1st person singular) He/she/it was (3rd person singular) We were (1st person plural) They were (3rd person plural)
In English, present tense verbs typically change based on whether the subject is singular or plural. These changes may involve adding an "-s" or "-es" to the base form of the verb for singular third person subjects. For example, "I walk" (first person singular), "You walk" (second person singular), "He walks" (third person singular), "We walk" (first person plural), "You walk" (second person plural), "They walk" (third person plural).
The 1st person plural object pronoun is "us." It is used to refer to a group of people that includes the speaker.
Examples of nominative 1st person pronouns include "I" and "we."
Note: this question should NOT be in the English section. Secondly, the question doesn't make sense; participles don't have plurals in Spanish. 1st person plural (present indicative): [nosotros] alquilamos 1st person plural (present perfect): [nosotros} hemos alquilado
The word 'sees' is a verb for the third person singular: He sees, She sees, It sees... The word shirts is a plural noun, a word for things. The word 'walk' is a verb for the first and second person, singular and plural, and the third person plural: I walk, We walk, You walk, Yhey walk...
Don't know what an insubordinate clause is, but I do know that "was" is singular, and "were" is plural. 2nd person (you) is an exception, you use "were" in both singular and plural: You were (singular, one person) You were (plural, all of you) Otherwise, like I said, you just use "was" in 1st person and 3rd person singular, and "were" in 1st and 3rd plural: I was (1st person singular) He/she/it was (3rd person singular) We were (1st person plural) They were (3rd person plural)
"Is" and "are" are both present tense form of "be".I am (1st person singular)We are (1st person plural)You are (2nd person singular and plural)He/She/It is (3rd person singular)They are (3rd person plural)
Both can be correct depending on person and number. I have more (1st person singular) We have more (1st person plural) You have more (2nd person singular and plural) He/she/it has more (3rd person singular) They have more (3rd person plural)
1969
To conjugate a verb, you need to change its form to match the subject in terms of tense, person, number, and sometimes gender. You can recognize a verb by identifying words that show actions, events, or states of being in a sentence.
Examples of nominative 1st person pronouns include "I" and "we."
If you are using walk as a noun (taking a walk, or a sidewalk), the plural is simply walks. E.g. She likes to take long walks.
Earth's Moon
Note: this question should NOT be in the English section. Secondly, the question doesn't make sense; participles don't have plurals in Spanish. 1st person plural (present indicative): [nosotros] alquilamos 1st person plural (present perfect): [nosotros} hemos alquilado
The 1st person plural object pronoun is "us." It is used to refer to a group of people that includes the speaker.
It's singular when it's used with a singular subject ("I walk," "you walk") and plural when used with a plural subject ("we walk," "you [plural] walk," "they walk"). What is it not is a third-person singular verb: you can't say "he walk."(Actually you can say say "he walk," but hardly anybody understands the present subjunctive any more, so let's just say you can't say that, at least not in ordinary idiomatic and grammatical English discourse.)