English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We're learning the present perfect tense (ha comido, ha hablado, etc.) However we learned that sometimes you add an accent with -eer verbs such as leer to make it leído. Also, with -aer such as traer to make it traído. My teacher also wrote down for -uir verbs, but when I looked up the verbs such as seguir and construir, the accent isn't there. ???
1. Do -uir verbs get an accent in the present perfect?
2. Do all -aer verbs get the accent or just traer?
Best answer gets 10 points ASAP

2007-02-07 12:58:35 · 4 answers · asked by Emily 7 in Education & Reference Homework Help

4 answers

I haven't really thought about it, but the best advice is to follow the rules of accentation.

Construir, seguir, conseguir- don't have accents. It depends on the verb; some do and some don't.

There aren't many verbs that end in -aer or -eer, so I don't think that it's a huge issue. My teacher said that the best way to know if there's an accent on any verb is to memorize them and read some text in Spanish.
It's not the most exciting answer, but it works.

There's no rule that says that every verb with a certain ending gets an accent and verbs with other endings don't.

2007-02-07 13:15:04 · answer #1 · answered by Krimo 2 · 0 0

1. Some verbs like -uir, are accented. It all depends on the pronunciation of the verb you are choosing. I would say that under that there are not so many accented verbs in the -uir form.

2. Not all -aer verbs are accented. A clear example would be beber, ha bebido.

I am going to tell you how to know if a word (any word) in spanish is accented or not, I hope you understand it. First you divide the word in syllables, for example: bebido= be-bi-do. Then you pronounce the wourld and listen to the syllable that is supposed to be accented, in this case: be-BI-do. If the accent is supposed to go on the last syllable and that syllable ends with n,s or a vowel, then it is accented, if not, you won't accent it. Examples: can-ción. If the syllable that is supposed to be accented is the second one counting from right to left, then it is accented when the word does not end in n, s or vowel. Example: cáncer. If the syllable that is supposed to be accented is any of the rest of the syllables in the word, you always accent it, for example: exámenes.

I hope that helped, and remember that those rules are for ALL words, not only verbs.

2007-02-07 13:41:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

UMMMM NO!!! motives why there's a crolation between the two races is clarification for the MOORS.. Ever considering that Black pupils have chanced in this BLACK RACE white eurocentrics have been scuffling with the concern for some years now. approximately 8 years in the past i could examine the moors on yahoo or google and could in basic terms get one or 2 links on the concern. now that they have got found out that the MOORS have governed spain for extra then seven hundred years and italy White historians jumped everywhere in the area from the get flow. One question that they can't answer is that SHAKESPEAR himself have used multiple MOORS IN HIS performs and defined them as BLACK and a ordinary moor call OTHELLO is likely considered one of the questions. the 2d question to the Anglo pupils is they themselves stated that maximum latin words are dervied from the greek language and in greek the be conscious MOOR ability BURNT OR BLACK. now in case you are able to instruct me ONE ARAB OR WHITE SPAINARD it rather is BURNT OR BLACK then i will initiate coaching to the worldwide that they the place white. yet THERE ISNT. so simply by fact the WHITE pupils HAVE get entry to TO Public guidance manuals then its surprisingly difficult for my very own human beings to marvelous there wrongs.

2016-09-28 14:05:15 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

well it is more of another way to say it instead of an accent when you say leido (that is past tense) le-er is the present or leyendo(which actually can be use both in past and present tense) which would be verb.
traer (to bring) , traido (brought)

2007-02-07 13:18:41 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers