Necesario is definitely not a spanish verb, it is an adjective, as said above. Cosas, however, CAN be a spanish verb. It is the second person present subjunctive of the word coser, meaning to stitch up or sew. Quiero que cosas mis pantalones, I would like you to sew up my pants, would be an example of the word cosas used in verb form. But most of the time, cosa is a noun meaning "thing", and cosas is the plural of that noun.
2007-01-24 08:03:29
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answer #1
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answered by mthompson828 6
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I wouldn't say that.
Necesario (necessary) is an adjective, while Cosas (things) is noun.
For "necesario", the closest verb is "necesitar", for cosas I can't think of a related verb
2007-01-24 08:00:22
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answer #2
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answered by Jim G 5
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No.
"Necesario" is an adjective and means "necessary".
If you wanted the verb, you could use "necesitar": for example,
"yo necesito", which means "I need".
"Cosas" is a plural noun and means "things".
Good luck! :)
2007-01-24 07:45:57
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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No, they are not verbs.
necessary = adjective (necesario)
a verb would be -necesitar = to need
cosas = noun (things)
2007-01-24 08:21:05
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answer #4
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answered by Martha P 7
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necesario is and adjective and cosas is a noun.
2007-01-24 07:40:57
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answer #5
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answered by true blue 6
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necesario is an adjective
cosas is a plural noun
2007-01-24 07:44:38
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answer #6
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answered by OldGringo 7
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No.
"cosas" is a noun = things
"necesario" is an adjective = necessary
(plis and/or thanks would be nice, BTW).
2007-01-24 07:41:05
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answer #7
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answered by bbjaga 3
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No They are not.
You can identify spanish verbs by any word that ends in "ar", "ir" or "er".
2007-01-24 08:57:48
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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no.
necesario: necessary (adjective)
cosas: things (noun)
2007-01-24 07:45:53
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answer #9
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answered by cool_like 3
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si
2007-01-24 07:44:48
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answer #10
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answered by bladiman00 1
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