There are two types of irregular verbs in Spanish: Orthographic changing verbs (which are when the end of verb is changed to try to preserve pronunciation) and Radical changing verbs (which is when the root of the verb changes for no necessary reason).
Conducir is an orthographic changing verb as it follows the rules for -cer/-cir verbs. The yo form in the present tense of conducir is conduzco.
no, the yo form is "como." yo como tú comiste él come nosotros comemos ellos comen
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.
estoyestéestuveestabaestaréhe estadohabía estadohube estadohabré estadoestaríahabría estadoestuviera / estuvieseestuvierehaya estadohubiera / hubiese estadohubiere estadoque (yo) esté / que esté (yo) (imperativo indirecto)
Salgo is the yo (I) form for leave. Salgo is "I leave"
All of these verbs have an irregular yo (first person) form.
to have is the infinitive form of the irregular verb "tener" "yo tengo " means exactly the same like the phrase "i have "
no, the yo form is "como." yo como tú comiste él come nosotros comemos ellos comen
"Yo pongo"
Era is the imperfect yo ("I") form of the Spanish verb ser ("to be"). Without the subject pronoun, it may translate as "He was," "It was," "She was" or "You were" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "(yo) EY-ra" in Uruguayan Spanish.
El pone. Yo Pongo
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.
There are two verbs in Spanish for 'to know:' saber - to know a piece of information or 'how to' do something. Example: Mi hermano sabe conducir un auto. conocer - to know as in: to be familiar with a person, place or thing. Example: Yo conozco a tu hermano.
You would say "Yo" or just use the Yo form which infers "I" :)
In the "Yo" form(I), it is "No me gusta"
Leo = I read.
"i seem to not speak spanish" it means that in all spanish speaking countries
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.