Verbs in Spanish have different conjugations based on the subject and tense from "summary" of Spanish Sentences by Nik Marcel,Robert P. Stockwell,J. Donald Bowen,Ismael Silva-Fuenzalida
Verbs in Spanish change their form depending on the subject of the sentence and the tense being used. This means that the ending of the verb will vary depending on whether the subject is "I," "you," "he/she," "we," or "they." For example, the verb "hablar" (to speak) will be conjugated differently for each subject: "hablo" (I speak), "hablas" (you speak), "habla" (he/she speaks), "hablamos" (we speak), and "hablan" (they speak).
In addition to varying based on the subject, verbs in Spanish also change depending on the tense in which they are being used. There are different verb tenses in Spanish, such as present, past, future, and conditional, and each tense has its own set of conjugations for regular verbs. For example, the v...
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