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Lo siento, pero responderé en inglés para explicar mejor su pregunta.

The rules of conjugating verbs in English and Spanish are quite different. Spanish has many different verb forms, including el presente, el pasado, and el futuro, with set rules for regular and irregular verbs that rarely deviate from the norm. English, on the other hand, has many different rules for different verbs and exceptions to rules that are hard to chart and can seem random.

In Spanish, for instance, a regular -ar infinitive conjugated in el tiempo presente would have the endings -o, -as, -a, -amos, -áis, -an.

This means that a verb like bailar would be conjugated as:

yo - bailo

tú - bailas

Ud., él, ella - baila

nosotros - bailamos

vosotros - bailáis

Uds., ellos, ellas - bailan

There are different conjugation rules for regular -er and -ir verbs, as well as irregular verbs in Spanish.

This is different in English. To conjugate the infinitive of dance, it would look like:

I - dance

you - dance

she, he - dances

we - dance

they - dance

The best way to answer your question is to examine an individual verb in English and conjugate it that way instead of reading a table.

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10y ago

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