"You were playing" would be "jugaba" or "jugabas", which is the "imperfect". "Jugabas al Golf" can be translated as "you were playing golf".
JUGABA (usted) -- you, formal singular
JUGABAN (ustedes) --you, informal plural, only in Spanish-America; formal plural in Spain
JUGABAS (tú) --you, familiar singular
JUGABAIS (vosotros, as)-- you, familiar plural only in Spain
"Tuve" is the past tense conjugation of the verb "tener" in Spanish, which means "to have." It translates to "I had" in English.
"They received" (past tense for the verb Recibir)
The present verb tense is used to describe actions that are currently happening or are generally true. It is formed by adding the base form of the verb to indicate an action happening now.
The Spanish verb "lava" means "wash" or "clean" in English.
Yes, "were playing" is a verb phrase that combines the past tense of the auxiliary verb "to be" (were) with the present participle of the verb "to play" (playing). It indicates an action that was happening in the past.
Charles Rallides has written: 'The tense aspect system of the Spanish verb' -- subject(s): Dialects, Spanish language, Verb
Past verb tense: We drank.Present verb tense: We are drinking.Future verb tense: We will drink.
The Spanish verb "vivir" is irregular in its conjugation.
The past tense of even is evened. "I evened the playing field when the rules were made fair."
The verb meaning "to play" in Spanish is "jugar". The past participle "played" would be "jugado". The past tense of the verb has 12 possibilities (six in the preterit, six in the imperfect tense), depending on who did the playing and the context of use.
It depends. The verb for have is "tener", and the future tense is the one you need here. It is an irregular verb in this tense, and is conjugated like so: tendré tendremos tendrás tendréis tendrá tendrán
The past-tense verb for "be" is "was" or "were" depending on the subject.