here are some Spanish verbs ending in ER:
aprender- to learn
beber- to drink
comer- to eat
correr- to run
creer- to believe
leer- to read
ser- to be
tomer-to take/drink
vender- to sell
In the present tense, it is -an for -ar verbs and -en for -er and -ir verbs.
spanish verbs are either 'ir' 'er' or 'ar'
"Ir" is one of the three endings for Spanish verbs, the others being "ar" and "er".
It is the basic form of a verb. In Spanish, there are three types of verbs, categorized by their endings. "Ar", "er" and "ir". Examples: hablar, comer, pedir.
Only if you tell us what verbs to translate and conjugate.
Regular Verbs
In the present tense, it is -an for -ar verbs and -en for -er and -ir verbs.
spanish verbs are either 'ir' 'er' or 'ar'
"Ado" is the ending for forming the past participle of "ar" verbs. The ending for "er" and "ir" verbs is "ido". Examples: hablar - hablado. pedir - pedido. haber - habido.
In Spanish, regular past tense verbs are formed by changing the ending of the infinitive form of the verb. For regular -ar verbs, you change the -ar ending to -é, -aste, -ó, -amos, -asteis, or -aron. For regular -er and -ir verbs, you change the -er or -ir ending to -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, or -ieron. Irregular verbs have their own unique past tense conjugations that you will need to memorize.
To conjugate verbs in the nosotros form, you typically drop the infinitive ending (-ar, -er, -ir) and add the appropriate ending for the specific verb tense. For example, in present tense, for -ar verbs you add "-amos" and for -er/-ir verbs you add "-emos" or "-imos".
comprender- to understand entender- to understand comer- to eat beber- to drink -er words are usually verbs in spanish.
The imperfect tense sign in Spanish is "-aba/-ía" for -ar verbs and "-ía" for -er and -ir verbs.
In Spanish, there are three irregular verbs in the imperfect tense: ser, ir, and ver. These verbs have unique conjugations in the imperfect tense that do not follow the regular patterns of regular -ar, -er, or -ir verbs.
Il a neigé (it snowed).Neiger (to snow) is a regular verb with an -er ending. To form the passé composé with regular -er verbs:1) Conjugate the auxiliary verb (in the case with neiger and most verbs, it is avoir)Il a2) Add the past participle by removing the -er ending and adding é.neig(er)neigé
tener, obtener, ser, volver, ver, leer, creer, correr---todos son infinitivosalot...almost all spanish verbs end in -er, -ar, or -irbeber- to drinkser- to besaber- to knowleer- to readtener- to havecaer- to fallthats just a few examples of MANY spanish verbs that end in -er
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.