The verb for 'to play' in Spanish is jugar. Jugar is an "ue" verb, which means that the yo, tu, el, ella, usted, ellos, ellas, and ustedes versions swtiches the "u" to "ue." The conjugation chart is shown below: Yo: Juego Tu: Juegas El, Ella, Usted: Juega Nosotros: Jugamos Vosotros: Jugais (note: there is an accent mark over the "i") Ellos, Ellas, Ustedes: Juegan
For "to play" as in a child playing, the Spanish verb is "jugar." It is pronounced, "hoo-GAR." The noun is juego (act of playing). For "a play" (theater drama), the Spanish noun is obra (de teatro), also drama.
el jugador = the player
The Spanish verb for "celebrate" is "celebrar".
spanish noun- eclipse verb - eclipsar
"Salir" is the Spanish verb meaning "to go out".
"Toco" in Spanish can mean "I touch" (from the verb "tocar") or "I play" (as in playing a musical instrument).
For "to play" as in a child playing, the Spanish verb is "jugar." It is pronounced, "hoo-GAR." The noun is juego (act of playing). For "a play" (theater drama), the Spanish noun is obra (de teatro), also drama.
el jugador = the player
"Hacer" is the Spanish verb meaning "to make" or "to do".
ther is no work for would...instead there is a tense that you add to any verb. Like she would play soccer is jugaria futbol....jugar is play so the verb just changes.
The verb meaning "to play" in Spanish is "jugar". The past participle "played" would be "jugado". The past tense of the verb has 12 possibilities (six in the preterit, six in the imperfect tense), depending on who did the playing and the context of use.
You could use "¿Cuál instrumentos tocas?" In Spanish, the verb "tocar" is used for playing musical instruments, while "jugar" is used in the more general sense of "to play".
The verb is "play" and the verb phrase is "can play."
The verb "necesitar" in Spanish means "to need."
This is really a combination of a verb and an adjective in both languages. In English, this is the verb "to be" plus the modifier "full". In Spanish, this is the verb "estar" and the adjective "lleno/a". So "to be full" in Spanish is "Estar lleno/a". The related Spanish verb "llenar" means "to fill".
Suono as "I am playing (I do play, I play)" and Tocco as "I am touching (I do touch, I touch)" are Italian equivalents of the Spanish present indicative verb Toco. The respective pronunciations will be "swo-NA-rey" and "tok-KA-rey" in Italian and "TO-ko" in Spanish.
as far as I know, there is no chaver verb in spanish ...check the spelling