To command someone to run in Spanish, you would say 'corre.'
To command someone to eat bread in Spanish, you would say 'Come el pan.'
To command someone to open the door in Spanish, you would say 'Abre la puerta.'
The informal command for "stop" in Spanish is "¡Párate!" or "¡Para!".
It's the command form of salir, which means "to leave". So, if someone says, sali, they are saying "Leave!"
"Escribe tu nombre" translates to "write your name" in English. It is a command in Spanish prompting someone to write their name.
To command someone to eat bread in Spanish, you would say 'Come el pan.'
To command someone to open the door in Spanish, you would say 'Abre la puerta.'
You would say 'come.'
hacer agradable
To command someone not to speak using the tú command in Spanish, you would say "No hables." This form uses the negative tú command, where "no" is placed before the verb "hablar" in its subjunctive form. This structure effectively instructs someone not to engage in speaking.
The correct "tú" command for the verb "escuchar" in Spanish is "escucha." This is the affirmative tú command form, used to tell someone to listen. If you need the negative form, it would be "no escuches."
To run as in physical motion = correr As a command (Run!) = "¡Corre!"
Someone with the power to command a government or business is called a chief executive. It is important to have someone responsible for difficult decisions.
If you want to TELL someone to run, the Spanish word is "corre." It is pronounced, "KOR-ay." If you want to say "to run," the Spanish word is "correr." It is pronounced, "Kore-AIR." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Type conf.exe as a run command.
The informal command for "stop" in Spanish is "¡Párate!" or "¡Para!".
The negative command for "ir" (to go) in Spanish is "no vayas." This form is used when telling someone not to go somewhere. It is the second-person singular (tú) form in the imperative mood.