volontuliĝu
The ĝ is pronounced as j in jam. The u is pronounced as oo in shampoo.
The word 'volunteers' is the plural form for the noun volunteer. The verb form is also volunteer (volunteers, volunteering, volunteered).
Question: How do you form an imperative command in English? Answer: To form an imperative command in English, simply use the base form of the verb without a subject (e.g. "Close the door.").
The simplest tenses of a verb are the present, past, and future tenses. These tenses refer to actions happening now, actions that have already happened, and actions that will happen in the future, respectively.
"Posez" in French can mean "ask" or "pose." It is the imperative form of the verb "poser" which means to ask a question, place, or pose something.
"Imperative" is a sophisticated term for a bossy verb.
The word 'volunteers' is the plural form for the noun volunteer. The verb form is also volunteer (volunteers, volunteering, volunteered).
The Esperanto words for noun and verb are substantivo and verbo.
Question: How do you form an imperative command in English? Answer: To form an imperative command in English, simply use the base form of the verb without a subject (e.g. "Close the door.").
The simplest tenses of a verb are the present, past, and future tenses. These tenses refer to actions happening now, actions that have already happened, and actions that will happen in the future, respectively.
aimez is a verb conjugated in the emperative form so it means: the verb to love in the imperative form: LOVE.
No. The word volunteer is a noun or verb. Voluntary is the adjective form and the adverb would be "voluntarily."
"Posez" in French can mean "ask" or "pose." It is the imperative form of the verb "poser" which means to ask a question, place, or pose something.
Esperanto verb for: to install
"Imperative" is a sophisticated term for a bossy verb.
In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".In Spanish: a form of the verb "quedar" - to stay. For example, "He/she/it stays", also the imperative, as in "Stay here!".In Portuguese: a fall, as in "I had a bad fall today".
An example of an imperative sentence is "Please close the door." It is a command or request that tells someone to perform a specific action. Imperative sentences are characterized by the use of a verb in the base form without a subject.
Endings describe the way that verb tenses are indicated in Esperanto. The endings -as, -us, -os and -us respectively identify the present, past, future and conditional tenses while the suffixes -i and -urespectively indicate the infinitive and the imperative. An example with the verb havi ("to have") shows the conjugation as havas, havus, havos and havus preceded by the subject pronouns mi ("I"), vi ("you" singular and plural), li ("he") or ši ("she"), ni("we") and ili ("they").