Regular Spanish verb conjugation follows predictable patterns based on the verb endings: -ar, -er, and -ir. For instance, for -ar verbs like "estudiar" (to study), the present tense conjugations include "estudio" (I study), "estudias" (you study), "estudia" (he/she studies). In the...
Take our quick quiz to start your journey to fluency today! Get started Combar (to curve) conjugation Spanish 1 examples Display translations Yo Tu Él/ell(a/o)/ Usted Nosotr(os/as) Vosotr(os/as) Ell(os/as) Present tense combo ...
Conjugate Spanish verbs with our conjugator. Verb conjugations include preterite, imperfect, future, conditional, subjunctive, and more tenses.
This tool includes conjugation tables for both regular and irregular Spanish verbs. When you're learning Spanish, you keep coming across unfamiliar verbs in various forms: in your exercises, homework and reading texts. How to learn them all efficiently? Use the Promt.One service to easily find...
Conjugate Spanish verbs with our conjugator. Verb conjugations include preterite, imperfect, future, conditional, subjunctive, and more tenses.
Check out our Spanish-language page on accents to learn more about dipthongs.Irregular participlesCertain verbs have an irregular participle form as shown in the table below:VerbIrregular ParticipleRegular Participle abrir abierto cubrir cubierto decir dicho escribir escrito hacer hecho freír* ...
Promt.One service helps you to conjugate English verbs quickly and easily. Type the infinitive or any other form of any regular verb (like,want,study,improve,stop,travel), irregular verb (be,come,bring,do,buy,drive) or phrasal verb (come back,get out,see off) into the search box and ...
This is a lot of groundwork to begin with, so take your time. Everyone works at a different pace, and it may take a while before you venture from regular to irregular verbs. As you become more and more fluent, you’ll notice that these verbs will become easier to grasp—until it fee...
“Like” (suki, 好き) and “dislike” (kirai, 嫌い) are both na-adjectives, but the contradiction of them being verbs in English and adjectives in Japanese means implementing them is a little more complicated. To keep things simple, all you need to say is Suki desu for “I like it”...
There are regular-erverbs and irregular-erverbs;direis anirregular-reverb. The irregular group can be organized into five patterns around the verbsprendre,battre, mettre, rompreand those ending in -craindre. The problem is thatdiredoes not fit into these patterns at all. It belongs to the rem...