Yes, you do. However, in Spanish you can drop the subject whereas French tends to keep them.
Only if you tell us what verbs to translate and conjugate.
You need to conjugate verbs in most languages. Whether you realize it or not, you conjugate verbs in English as well as in French. Use the French verb "avoir" for example. "j'ai" translates to "I have", and "il a" translates to "he has". If you didn't conjugate it and just left it as "j'avoir" then that would translate to "I to have" which is obviously incorrect.
To conjugate stem-changing verbs in Spanish, you change the stem of the verb in all forms except nosotros and vosotros. The stem change occurs in the present tense and sometimes in the preterite tense.
it does not translate conjugated verbs. Try to go to a specialized website like verb2verb.com who conjugates in both English and French.
About French offers many different 'classes' on French including an introductory to French verbs. There is also Rosetta Stone which seems to get high reviews when it comes to learning another language.
Arguer is a first-group verb (regular verbs ending in 'er) - (check link for the conjugation)
The imperfect is the most regular tense in Spanish. There are only three irregular verbs in this tense: Ir, Ser, and Ver. To conjugate, add the following to the stem of the verb: Ar verbs: Aba, abas, aba, abamos abais, aban. For Ir or Er verbs: ía, ías, ía, íamos, íais, ían.
It's just a built-in part of their language that is harder for those learning French to understand.
When we conjugate verbs, we arrange them according to the subject of the sentence. This means that the verb ending changes to match the subject in terms of person, number, and tense.
Besides lots of Spanish learning websites, one can always go to the local library and open an English - Spanish dictionary. The information found in the dictionary is very helpful and probably is one of the most common ways of learning about Spanish verbs.
tense
"had" is the past tense of "to have", which is the verb "avoir" in French imparfait tense for avoir: j'avais tu avais il avait nous avions vous aviez ils avaient It is one of the two "auxiliary" verbs in French, it enables you to conjugate verbs in composite tenses like plus que parfait or passé composé. auxiliary verbs: to have: avoir to be: être