Answer:
Explanation:
* A beginning sentence that uses one preterite tense verb to explain what happened to your best friend:
A mi amiga Juanita le encanta comer dulces. Ella tiene dolor de muelas y no se siente bien.
My best friend Juanita loves eating candy. She has a toothache and she doesn't feel well.
1. Affirmative formal commands to tell your best friend what to do:
Sal de la casa y toma un poco de aire fresco.
Get out of the house and get some fresh air.
There are many type of commands in Spanish language, but we are going to talk about tú command. We use this type of command when we are talking to the person that's not close to us or we simply don't know them too well. If the person is older, or if the person is someone we respect ( like school teachers, our boss, etc. ) In this example, we used a SINGULAR tú command.
2. Negative formal commands to tell your best friend what not to do:
To use a negative formal command of any type, both singular and plural, all we have to do is stick NO before the affirmative formal command, so it does not get easier than that.
No comas dulces, son malos para tus dientes.
Don't eat sweets, they're bad for your teeth.
3. Doler with a negative formal command to keep your best friend from getting worse:
No dejes que te duela mandíbula por masticar.
Don't let your jaw hurt from chewing.
Like we talked in the previous example, all we need is a negative word, the most common one, and the verb in imperative tense. And we got ourselves a negative formal command.
4. An affirmative formal command to tell your best friend how to take care of himself while at home:
We wrote about this use in the first example. To form a formal command, we would still use TU and we would use the needed verb in the imperative, so we can form a correct formal command.
Enjuague su boca con agua tibia con sal.
Rinse your mouth with warm salted water.
5. Regular and/or stem-changing verbs at least one body part vocabulary words and expressions:
¿Siente dolor en tu cabeza?
Do you feel pain in your head?
la cabeza -- feminine singular noun with an adequate article for feminine, la. means -- head
Since the main form of a verb is simply called in INFINITIVE, like sabER, while other verbs are called stem-changing verbs because during conjugation, the stem changes in a way that we know it would. E in the stem-changing verbs transforms into ie, but only in the first person plural form.