no, the yo form is "como."
yo como
tú comiste
él come
nosotros comemos
ellos comen
"Yo quero comer culo" means "I want to eat ass." literallly.
Yes, it is an irregular verb. Because it stem-changes (e-->i), that makes it an irregular verb. No only that, but it has an irregular yo form in the present tense (vengo), which makes it even more irregular.
Me voy a comer would be the best way to "I am going to eat" in Spanish.
"No gracias no quiero comer" means "no thanks I do not want to eat". The verb "comer" can be conjugated. The subject "Yo", "El/Ella, "Tu", Nosotros", "Vosotros", and "Ellos/Ellas. If you have more questions you can ask what the conjugations are.
All of these verbs have an irregular yo (first person) form.
"Yo quero comer culo" means "I want to eat ass." literallly.
it would be yo te puedo alimentar or yo te puedo dar de comer
Yes, it is an irregular verb. Because it stem-changes (e-->i), that makes it an irregular verb. No only that, but it has an irregular yo form in the present tense (vengo), which makes it even more irregular.
Me voy a comer would be the best way to "I am going to eat" in Spanish.
In Spanish, irregular verbs are conjugated differently than regular verbs. For example: Tener is an irregular verb because instead of the "yo form" being teno, it is tengo. Comer is a regular verb because the "yo form", como, follows the verb conjugation rule. Regular verbs are conjugated by removing the last two letters of the word in its original form, and a "suffix" is added on, depending on the subject Irregular verbs follow their own rule. You may probably learn this later on if you take Spanish or if you are taking it now.
It's doy, since dar is an irregular verb, so doy.
There are no main "yo" verbs in Spanish. Like if you said "yo voy" it means i go. or if you said "yo juego" it means to play. All Spanish verbs have a yo form which means your saying you are doing something. there are no main yo verbs.
The imperfect form of "comer" (to eat) in Spanish is conjugated as follows: "yo comía," "tú comías," "él/ella/usted comía," "nosotros/nosotras comíamos," "vosotros/vosotras comíais," and "ellos/ellas/ustedes comían." This tense is used to describe actions that were ongoing or habitual in the past.
Whether or not they follow the basic conjugation for which type of verb they are. Examples of regular would be, hablar (-ar verb), escribir (-ir verb), and comer (-er verb). What you'll notice while conjugating these is that nothing changes and it's the simplest conjugation. For hablar in the present tense it's just, yo hablo, tu hablas, el/ella/usted habla, nosotros hablamos, vosotros hablais, and ellos/ellas/ustedes hablan. Easy stuff, right? Okay... Now let me try to think of three irregular verbs. Pensar (-ar irregular verb), dormir (-ir irregular verb), and poder (-er irregular verb). When conjugating any of these irregulars the stem itself will change, instead of just the ending durring cojugation. I'll conjugate all of these in the present "yo form" to show you what I mean. Pensar becomes Pienso in the yo form, Dormir becomes Duermo in the yo form, and Poder becomes Puedo in the yo form.
"No gracias no quiero comer" means "no thanks I do not want to eat". The verb "comer" can be conjugated. The subject "Yo", "El/Ella, "Tu", Nosotros", "Vosotros", and "Ellos/Ellas. If you have more questions you can ask what the conjugations are.
All of these verbs have an irregular yo (first person) form.
A "regular" verb is any verb where you simply take off the -er, -ir, or -ar ending and can add the conjugation to the end. Both Saber and Conocer are classified as "irregular" verbs because you cannot do that to them. You have to make other changes to the root of the verb before you can put you ending on them. For example: Conocer in the present yo form is "Conozco". Note the addition of the -z- within the verb, making it an irregular conjugation. The present yo form for Saber is "Sé", which is completely irregular. Also note that the subjunctive/command form for Saber is "Sepa", which is irregular as well.