95.6k views
10 votes
Please help!!

Write the present tense of ser and then the past tense of ser, the present tense of estar and the
past tense of estar in every person like above. To this with all five verbs. Four verbs times 5
person
forms each is 20 words in present and 20 in past So you should have a total of 40 verbs you will
write. Accents count make sure you have learned to set your keyboard to a Spanish keyboard
or learn the strokes to make accents, your choice.

User Mortz
by
5.7k points

1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

Ser present tense

Yo soy

eres

Él/ella/ud. es

Nosotros somos

Vosotros sois

Ellos/ellas/uds. son

Ser preterite tense (past)

Yo fui

fuiste

Él/ella/ud. fue

Nosotros fuimos

Vosotros fuisteis

Ellos/ellas/uds. fueron

Ser imperfect tense (different type of past tense)

Yo era

eras

Él/ella/ud. era

Nosotros éramos

Vosotros erais

Ellos/ellas/uds. eran

Estar present tense

Yo estoy

estás

Él/ella/ud. está

Nosotros estamos

Vosotros estáis

Ellos/ellas/uds. están

Estar preterite tense (past)

Yo estuve

estuviste

Él/ella/ud. estuvo

Nosotros estuvimos

Vosotros estuvisteis

Ellos/ellas/uds. estuvieron

Estar imperfect tense (different type of past tense)

Yo estaba

estabas

Él/ella/ud. estaba

Nosotros estábamos

Vosotros estabais

Ellos/ellas/uds. estaban

Step-by-step explanation:

To complete this exercise, you have to write the present and past tenses forms of the verbs "ser" and "estar".

The exercise explains that you have to do it with four verbs times but it does not clarify which verbs times because there are more than four in the Spanish language. I wrote the Spanish simple present tense, the Spanish preterite tense and the Spanish imperfect tense.

The Spanish simple present tense (''presente del indicativo'' in Spanish) is used to talk about habitual situations, routines, universal truths, facts and things happening now or in the near future.

Then, on one hand, you use the Spanish preterite tense ("pretérito perfecto simple" in Spanish) to talk about actions completed at some point in the past. On the other hand, you use the Spanish imperfect tense ("pretérito imperfecto" in Spanish) to talk about past habitual actions or to talk about what someone was doing but then got interrupted with something else.

User Aamin Khan
by
5.7k points