Singular
Yo soy
Tú eres
Él es
Ella es
Usted es
Vos sos
Plural
Nosotros somos
Nosotras somos
Vosotros sois
Vosotras sois
Ellos son
Ellas son
Ustedes son
This is only the present tense. I assumed that's what you wanted.
"Attack", in Spanish, is "atacar". To conjugate it, you must have a subject. An example subject would be "yo", which means "I". The conjugated form of "atacar" is "ataco" if the subject was "yo". "Yo ataco" means "I attack". The ending would be different with different subjects.
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.
No, no pronoun should be capitalized, unless it's at the beginning of a sentence.
To conjugate the verb "vivir" (to live) in Spanish: Yo vivo (I live) Tú vives (You live) Él/ella vive (He/she lives) Nosotros/as vivimos (We live) Vosotros/as vivís (You all live) Ellos/as viven (They live)
The conjugating of verbs for every subject pronoun is not a feature unique to Spanish. All European languages do it. Semitic languages do it...to an even more minute degree than Spanish. I believe Slavic languages do it as well. It could be that the practice arises from the perception of the uniqueness and individuality of the persons and the perceived need to differentiate between them when speaking. The practice is found in Greek and Sanskrit, two progenitor languages to Spanish. The follow-on question that you might pose is, "Given that so many languages conjugate verbs differently for every subject pronoun, why doesn't English?"
Aamir jamal; All real numbers are complex numbers with 0 as its imaginary part.A real number is self-conjugate. e.g;a+0i self conjugate =a-0i i=iota
Nosotros is the subject pronoun in Spanish meaning we. It is one of subject pronouns that you don't have to use all of the time. Let's say that you wanted to say, "We speak Spanish." The verb for speak is hablar. When you conjugate that in the nosotros form you get nosotros hablamos. Nosotros hablamos español means we speak Spanish. Hablamos español means the same thing, so it isn't used that often in that case, but it is used anywhere you want to say we. It can be yourself and a friend or yourself and multiple people, it is the plural of me or I.
Servir = To Serve Yo Sirvo = I Serve Tu Sirves = You Serve El/Ella/Ud Sirve = He/She/You Formal Serve Nosotros Servimos = We Serve Ellos/Ellas/Uds Sirven = They/You All Formal Serve
There are six subject pronouns in the Spanish language: yo (I), tú (you), él/ella/usted (he/she/you formal), nosotros/nosotras (we), vosotros/vosotras (you all, informal), and ellos/ellas/ustedes (they/you all formal).
For Spanish present tense...Let's use to verb caminar.Yo- CaminoTu- CaminasEl/ella/Ud-CaminaNosotros-CaminamosEllos/ellas/Uds(they all)-CaminanBasically drop the last "r" even though all teachers will tell you to drop the "ar".
The conjugate acid for this anion is HBrO, or hypobromous acid. Finding the formula of a conjugate acid is simple actually. All you have to do is remove a negative charge and ad an "H" at the beginning.
The main Spanish subject pronouns are: yo (I), tú (you), él (he), ella (she), usted (you formal), nosotros/nosotras (we), vosotros/vosotras (you all informal), ellos/ellas (they), and ustedes (you all formal).