Conjugación de verbos
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Caramelita
April 24, 2013, 03:27 AM
Hola !!
De lo que tengo entendido, los verbos conjugan en : tempus (tiempo), modus (modo) y persona. ¿Es correcto?
por ejemplo. modo - indicativo, subjuntivo, condicional y imperativo ( claro que hay más, pero los principal son estos, no?
tiempo- presente y imperfecto (los principales ?)
y persona: yo, tú, él y ella, nosotros, vosotros, ellos ?
Perikles
April 24, 2013, 04:56 AM
De lo que tengo entendido, los verbos conjugan en : tempus (tiempo), modus (modo) y persona. ¿Es correcto?There are two more attributes: number and voice. Number is either singular or plural.
yo : first person singular
nosotros: first person plural
etc.
Voice is either active or passive (although the Spanish passive voice is avoided, it does exist so you must be aware of it. An example: Este libro fue escrito por un amigo mío)
Caramelita
April 24, 2013, 05:17 AM
There are two more attributes: number and voice. Number is either singular or plural.
yo : first person singular
nosotros: first person plural
etc.
Voice is either active or passive (although the Spanish passive voice is avoided, it does exist so you must be aware of it. An example: Este libro fue escrito por un amigo mío)
Oh, so if I need to conjugate the verbs, is this the right way? :
for example the verb "comer"
Persona Modo subjuntivo + Tiempo presente
yo coma
tú comas
él coma
nosotros comamos
vosotros comáis
ellos coman
Modo subjuntivo + Tiempo imperfecto
comiera, comieras, comiera, comiéramos, comieráis, comieran
Modo indicativo + Tiempo presente
como, comes, come, comemos, coméis, comen
Modo indicativo + Tiempo imperefecto
comí, comiste, comió, comimos, comisteis, comieron
Modo condicional + (hay tiempo para este modo?)
comería, comerías, comería, comeríamos, comeríais, comerían
Modo imperativo :
yo - (no hay), come, coma, comamos, comad, coman
¿Dónde debo poner el número? is "voice" same as aspecto ?
Perikles
April 24, 2013, 05:49 AM
Oh, so if I need to conjugate the verbs, is this the right way? :
for example the verb "comer"
Persona Modo subjuntivo + Tiempo presente
yo coma
tú comas
él coma
nosotros comamos
vosotros comáis
ellos coman :good:
Modo subjuntivo + Tiempo imperfecto
comiera, comieras, comiera, comiéramos, comieráis (no accent), comieran:good:
Modo indicativo + Tiempo presente
como, comes, come, comemos, coméis, comen:good:
Modo indicativo + Tiempo imperefecto
comí, comiste, comió, comimos, comisteis, comieron:good:
Modo condicional + (hay tiempo para este modo?) yes: condicional perfecto: yo habría comido etc.
comería, comerías, comería, comeríamos, comeríais, comerían:good: (present)
Modo imperativo :
yo - (no hay), come, coma, comamos, comad comed, coman:good:
¿Dónde debo poner el número? is "voice" same as aspecto ?No, voice = voz, even in linguistics.
Caramelita
April 24, 2013, 05:58 AM
No, voice = voz, even in linguistics.
Gracias!
Entonces en el final podría poner :
voz- pasiva - fue comido
voz- activa- yo como, tú comes etc... ?
y el número ? dónde lo tengo que poner? junto a la persona? por ej:
persona : first person singular, yo
second person singular, tú
third person singular, él
first person plural, nosotros
second person plural, vosotros and so on?
Perikles
April 24, 2013, 06:04 AM
Gracias!
Entonces en el final podría poner :
voz- pasiva - fue comido
voz- activa- yo como, tú comes etc... ?
y el número ? dónde lo tengo que poner? junto a la persona? por ej:
persona : first person singular, yo
second person singular, tú
third person singular, él
first person plural, nosotros
second person plural, vosotros and so on?Yes, all correct. But remember that Spanish avoids the passive voice construction, even though you need to identify it.
Caramelita
April 24, 2013, 06:12 AM
Yes, all correct. But remember that Spanish avoids the passive voice construction, even though you need to identify it.
Awesome, thank you so much!:applause:
Perikles
April 24, 2013, 06:28 AM
You are welcome. Spanish usually turns the passive voice into an active one. Here is a primitive example:
He is called Juan 3rd person singular present indicative passive
This translates into
Se llama Juan (= he calls himself Juan) 3rd person singular present indicative active
This is logical for people, because Juan probably does call himself Juan. But not logical for, say, a new baby, because it can't speak :rolleyes:. Nor is it logical for animals, because they don't call themselves anything. But that's how it works. :)
wrholt
April 25, 2013, 10:02 PM
Hola !!
De lo que tengo entendido, los verbos conjugan en : tempus (tiempo), modus (modo) y persona. ¿Es correcto?
por ejemplo. modo - indicativo, subjuntivo, condicional y imperativo ( claro que hay más, pero los principal son estos, no?
tiempo- presente y imperfecto (los principales ?)
y persona: yo, tú, él y ella, nosotros, vosotros, ellos ?
There are two more attributes: number and voice. Number is either singular or plural.
yo : first person singular
nosotros: first person plural
etc.
Voice is either active or passive (although the Spanish passive voice is avoided, it does exist so you must be aware of it. An example: Este libro fue escrito por un amigo mío)
There are other factors beside the 5 you two mention:
tiempo = tense (past, present, future)
modo = mood (indicative, subjunctive, conditional, imperative)
persona = person (first, second, third)
número = number (singular, plural)
voz = voice (active, passive)
The other factors include:
a. perfect (or perfective) vs. imperfect (or imperfective) [sometimes called "aspect"]
b. progressive/continuous vs. non-progressive/non-continuous [also sometimes considered to be part of "aspect"]
Perfect vs. imperfect is relevant only for past tenses in Spanish, äs we have:
past tense, indicative mood, perfect aspect = pretérito perfecto simple:
comí, comíste, comió, comimos, comisteis, comieron
and:
past tense, indicative mood, imperfect aspect = pasado imperfecto:
comía, comías, comía, comíamos, comíais, comían.
Actually, Spanish has 2 variations on the perfect aspect, as EVERY simple verb form of most verbs has a corresponding "perfecto compuesto" = "compound perfect" form consisting of the corresponding simple form of the verb "haber" + the "-do" form (often called the "past participle") of the original verb: simple infinitive "hacer" = to do, compound perfect infinitive "haber hecho" = to have done.
Similarly, EVERY simple verb form of most verbs has a corresponding progressive/continuous form consisting of the corresponding simple form of the verb + the "-ndo" form (often called the present participle or the gerundio) of the original verb: simple infinitive "hacer" = to do, progressive/continuous infinitive "estar haciendo" = to be doing.
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