1. tiene (possessive description)
2. sepa (non-realistic description; an ideal)
3. está (possessive; the clinic (not a clinic))
4. ayude (ningún, alguien, and nadie are always subjunctive)
5. pueda (an ideal; a surgeon (may or may not exist) and not the surgeon)
Answer:
<u><em>English- </em></u>
I
You
He, She, You
We
You all
They, you all
<u><em>vs.</em></u>
<u><em>Spanish- </em></u>
Yo
Tú
éL, ella, usted
Nosotros
Vosotros ( only used in spain )
Ellos, Ellas, Ustedes
Explanation:
I hope that helped, conjugation of our verbs in English doesn't often change however it does a lot in spanish. I'd suggest memorizing the common ones that you know you'll use, the verb and the conjugation. The pronouns come naturally. The way I practice is by writing sentences and paragraphs when learning. Each subject pronoun can be used for a different person whether informally or formally.
[ex. Tú vs. Usted
Tú: friend, family member, etc.
Usted: Someone in a position that requires respect]
Answer:
AGUA = AGUA
AGUDO = acute
aguELA = Income of the rights on loans consigned in a public document.
AGUDERO = SHARPER
Yo preparando sándwiches
Carlos toma fotos
tú duermes?
The person who said it first was correct