"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
"i" its the past tense for the verb tiene "to have"
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.
"They received" (past tense for the verb Recibir)
The present tense of the verb "hear" is "hear". For example, "I hear the music playing."
The verb "decor" is not a standard verb in Spanish. If you meant "decore" in the present tense, the yo form would be "decore".
Lavar is the spanish verb for "to clean" so, lava, would be he/she/you (formal)/it cleans in present tense
tuve is the 1st person past tense (preterite) of the verb tener- to have. So, it means 'I had.'
"Vivi" is the past tense of the verb "viver" (to live).
Conjugation: empecéNote that the "z" in the root changes to a "c" in front of the "e". Because "ze" is not allowed in Spanish, the "z" transitions to a "ce". This is the same with any verb that ends in "zar" in the preterite tense yo form and in the present subjunctive.
"Pasaron" comes from the verb "pasar" which means to pass. This is the past tense of the ellos form of the verb. So, "pasaron" means "they passed."
Past verb tense: We drank.Present verb tense: We are drinking.Future verb tense: We will drink.
Charles Rallides has written: 'The tense aspect system of the Spanish verb' -- subject(s): Dialects, Spanish language, Verb