There's 3 ways for 3 different types of verbs, -ar,-er,-ir verbs
which are verbs ending with those phrases.
Basically you replace ar,er,or,ir with the following:
ar:
yo...o
tu...as
ustd/el/ella...a
nosotros/as...amos
ustedes/ellos/ellas...an
er:
yo...o
tu...es
ustd/el/ella...e
nosotros/as...emos
ustedes/ellos/ellas...en
ir:
yo...o
tu...es
ustd/el/ella...e
nosotros/as...imos
ustedes/ellos/ellas...en
Conjugation makes the sentence seem more natural, and without out it you'll get a different meaning and it won't be as fluent. That was a lot to right! Would you be able to mark me the brainliest please?
<h3>Mauricio va a llevarle el ########### a su hija en la escuela. </h3><h3>Mauricio is going to take the dictionary to his daughter at school.</h3>
Answer: Mauricio <u>se lo</u> va a llevar.
Translation: Mauricio is going to take it.
Explanation: Transitive verbs need a direct object to complete their meaning. The direct object of the verb "llevar" is "el ###########", this is a masculine and singular noun, so the direct object pronoun is "<u>lo</u>" that matches gender and number with the object it replaces. The indirect object is "su hija", which is a singular noun and the indirect object pronoun is "le" because it has to match in number with the object it replaces. When the direct object and indirect object pronouns appear in the same sentence, the indirect object pronoun is always written first and replaced with "<u>se</u>", so in this sentence it is "<u>se lo</u>".
########### = word not allowed.
<h2><em>Spymore</em></h2>
i need the full question?
Answer:
El equipo <u>entrena</u> por la noche.
La víspera de Navidad es el veinticuatro de diciembre.