Yobu.
Compr- is the stem.
Yes, "cerrar" is a stem-changing verb in Spanish.
The stem of βαπτίζω is βαπτ-
Stem-changing verbs in Spanish exist to show changes in the way a verb is conjugated based on the vowel sound in the stem of the verb. This helps to maintain consistency in pronunciation and follow patterns in verb conjugation.
All of the letters before the -erare the stem. Thus:parlis the stem of parlerdécidis the stem of décidergagnis the stem of gagnerHowever if the last letter of the stem is a g, then an e must be added to the stem if an oor a would otherwise follow. To demonstrate:Parlerbecomes parlonsin the 1st person plural, however mangerbecomes mangeons. This is to keep the jsound on the g.It is similar if a c is the last letter of the stem; if an oor a follows the c,then it must be converted to a ç. To demonstrate:Parler becomes parlonsin the 1st person plural, however lancerbecomes lançons.Again, this is to keep the soft ssound on the c.
Venir is a regular and stem-changing verb in Spanish.
nadar
먹자/먹자요! Adding 자 to the end of a verb stem adds the meaning of "let's do this". 먹다 is the verb for "to eat" and 먹 is the verb stem. 요 is added to make it more polite.
CHOCAR is the only verb among the choices, chocar, poder, contar, or costar, that is not an o -> ue stem-changing verb.
祈る (inoru), is the Japanese verb meaning "to pray".
The noun 'answer' is 'kotae' in Japanese. The verb 'to answer' is 'kotaeru.'
The verb "to meet" is 'au' in Japanese.