If you mean how do you conjugate verbs that end in -ar, then I can help. I'll do an example with hablar (to speak). First, drop the ending (ar). Then, identify what the ending should be with this chart.
Pronoun Ending
yo -o (yo hablo)
tu -as (tu hablas)
el, ella, usted -a (el habla)
nosotros/as -amos (nosotros hablamos)
vosotros/as -ais (vosotros hablais)
ellos, ellas, ustedes -an (ellos hablan)
Note: I don't know a ton about spanish, as I am taking spanish at the moment.
No. Estudiar is a regular verb in Spanish. When conjugating this verb it follows all the rules for -ar verbs.
No, "dar" is a regular verb in Spanish. Its conjugation follows the same pattern as other regular -ar verbs.
No. Pasear is not even a word in the dictionary.
That is not a word in Spanish. Not a verb conjugation either.
"i" its the past tense for the verb tiene "to have"
Explorar-- it follows the normal rules of conjugation for AR verbs.
No. Estudiar is a regular verb in Spanish. When conjugating this verb it follows all the rules for -ar verbs.
No, "dar" is a regular verb in Spanish. Its conjugation follows the same pattern as other regular -ar verbs.
"You have" is "tienes".
eres eres
Buceo is a conjugation of the original verb "bucear" which means "to scuba dive." By dropping the -ar and adding the -o, the word it being changed to "I scuba dive."
"Our" is not a verb. It has no conjugation. The Spanish equivalent of "our" is "nuestro/a".
esta is a spanish conjugation of the word are.
esta is a spanish conjugation of the word are.
No. Pasear is not even a word in the dictionary.
There is a Spanish verb conjugation, which is trajimos (we brought).
In Spanish, conjugation is the process of changing the form of a verb to match the subject of the sentence. This means that the ending of the verb changes depending on who is performing the action. There are different verb tenses and moods that require specific conjugation rules to be followed.