What is the tu form of sacar?
Mode: Indicative
Personal Pronoun | Conjugation |
---|---|
Yo | saqué |
Tu | sacaste |
El/Ella | sacó |
Nosotros | sacamos |
What would the conjugation of sacar be for tú?
Subject Pronoun | Preterite Conjugation | Translation |
---|---|---|
tú | sacaste | you took out/got |
él/ella usted | sacó | he/she took out/got you (formal) took out/got |
nosotros/ nosotras | sacamos | we took out/got |
vosotros/ vosotras | sacasteis | you all took out/got |
How do you conjugate Dar?
Key Takeaways of Dar
- I give (yo doy)
- I gave (yo di)
- I will give (yo daré)
- I used to give (yo daba)
- If I give, I would… (si yo diera, daría)
- If I had given, I would have… (si hubiera dado, habría dado)
What are negative Tu commands?
Negative informal commands, also called negative tú commands, are used to tell a friend, family member the same age as you or younger, classmate, child, or pet not to do something. No compres la camisa.
What is the affirmative Tu command?
Affirmative TU commands are used to tell friends, family members, or young people to do something or to give instructions. To give an affirmative TU command, you have to use the third person singular form (él, ella, usted) in the present tense:
What is the command form of Dar?
“Di” is the past preterite for “dar”. As far as commands go, “di” is used for “decir” as a positive command in the ‘tu’ form. The negative command for “dar” in ‘tu’ form would be “no des”.
What are the negative commands in Spanish?
Negative commands in Spanish are for those moments in life when you need to directly tell someone not to do something. They’re great, for example, when you need to order someone to knock off some behavior: ¡No fumes aquí! (Don’t smoke here!) ¡No toques eso! (Don’t touch that!)