He bought, I buy, buy. Depends on the complete sentence.
He/she bought for him/her/usted(you, polite)
each or every as inEvery time I go to the store I buy something. Cada vez que voy a la tienda compro algo.
To buy its "comprar" I compro You compras He She compra Us compramos They compran
He/She/You bought (the) food/ the meal if there's an accent on the o in "compro". Without the accent it's I'm buying the food/meal.
'I buy', in Spanish is 'yo compro'. Not to be confused with 'you/he/she bought': usted/él/ella compró.
And he/she bought you a dog.The previous answer assumes that "compro" is in past, but for that it would have to have a tilde (´) as in compró, in which case would also mean it comes from a third person (he/she/it).Because it doesn't have the accent, it could be in present tense, first person, but because it has an "y" which means "and" ,it's not in the present but the near future. The correct translations are:Y te compro un perro = And I'll buy you a dog.¿Y te compro un perro? = And should I buy you a dog then?Y te compró un perro = And he/she/it bought you a dog.
dog
afuras is not a spanish word.
It is the Spanish word for "fox".
"quidera" is not a Spanish word.
"Coll" is not a Spanish word.
gaka is not a Spanish word