Here is the conjugation of the Portuguese verb 'perder'. The form of the infinitive is perder, which means 'to lose' in English. The form of the gerund is perdendo, which means 'losing'. The form of the participle is perdido, which means 'lost'. The present indicative is the following: eu perco; tu perdes; ela/ele/voce perde; nos perdemos; vos perdeis; elas/eles/voces perdem. The past indicative is the following: eu perdi; tu perdeste; ela/ele/voce perdeu; nos perdemos; vos perdestes; elas/eles/voces perderam. The imperfect indicative is the following: eu perdia; tu perdias; ela/ele/voce perdia; nos perdiamos; vos perdieis; elas/eles/voces perdiam. The pluperfect indicative is the following: eu perdera; tu perderas; ela/ele/voce perdera; nos perderamos; vos perdereis; elas/eles/voces perderam. The future indicative is the following: eu perderei; tu perderas; ela/ele/voce perdera; nos perderemos; vos perdereis; elas/eles/voces perderao. The future perfect indicative is the following: eu perderia; tu perderias; ela/elle/voce perderia; nos perderiamos; vos perderieis; elas/eles/voces perderiam. The present subjunctive is the following: eu perca; tu percas; ela/ele/voce perca; nos percamos; vos percais; elas/eles/voces percam. The imperfect past subjunctive is the following: eu perdesse; tu perdesses; ela/ele/voce perdesse; nos perdessemos; vos perdesseis; elas/eles/voces perdessem.
The forms of the personal infinitive are the following: perder eu; perderes tu; perder ela/ele/voce; perdermos nos; perderdes vos; elas/eles/voces perderem. The forms of the imperative are the following: perde tu; perca ela/ele/voce; percamos nos; perdei vos; and percam elas/eles/voces. The forms of the negative imperative are the following: nao percas tu; nao perca ela/ele/voce; nao percamos nos; nao percais vos; nao percam elas/eles/voces.
"Get lost" in Portuguese can be translated as "perder-se".
Não quero te perder.
depends on what the verb ends in, and what tense you want to conjugate in.
The stem change that applies to the verb "perder" is from "e" to "ie" in the present tense conjugations. For example: yo pierdo, tú pierdes, él/ella pierde.
i could you could
To conjugate a verb is to change it to fit the sentence. To conjugate run you could say: I run, He/She runs, We run, They run. Conjugation in the English language usually only applies to the He/She form as said.
Didn't find that word, but "apoteose" from Portuguese translates to "apoteosis" in Spanish, which translates to "apotheosis," "exaltation," or "finale." If verbs conjugate in Portuguese the same way as in Spanish, the verb form of apoteose might be apoteosar, which could then mean to exalt/glorify, to hail. try www.wordreference.com hope that helps
danser is the verb - you have to conjugate it.
the verb is pleurer so then you have to conjugate it
It is the formation or extinct of a link or connection between things in particular.
The verb "perder" undergoes a stem change from "e" to "ie" in the present tense. For example, in the first person singular, it becomes "pierdo." This change affects all forms except for the nosotros and vosotros forms. In the preterite tense, "perder" does not have a stem change.
Conjugate the verb " to be" I am you are he, she or it, is But seriously Be Being been