Preterite of Regular -er and -ir verbs
Affirmative and Negative words
Preterite of ir, ser, and hacer
Pronouns after prepositions
100
In the preterite, -er and -ir verbs are...?
Identical
100
When do you use affirmative or negative words?
When you want to talk about an indefinite or negative situation.
100
Ir, ser, and hacer are what in the preterite tense?
Irregular.
100
Pronouns that follow prepositions are the same as the subject pronouns in all forms except...?
mí(yo) and ti(tú)
200
Regular -er and -ir verbs follow a pattern similar to regular "..." verbs in the preterite
-ar
200
Alguno(a) and ninguno(a) must match the what of the noun they replace or modify?
Gender
200
The preterite forms of ir and ser are...?
Exactly the same.
200
Use pronouns after prepositions like...
a, con, de, and para.
300
Which forms take accents?
Yo forms and the usted/él/ella forms
300
When do alguno(a) and ninguno(a) have different forms?
When they are used before masculine singular nouns.
300
How do you determine which verb is being used?
Context clues.
300
Prepositions link a noun or a pronoun with...?
Another word in the sentence.
400
Which form of regular -ir verbs is the same in both the present and the preterite?
The nosotros(as) form
400
If a verb is preceded by no, words that follow must be...?
Negative
400
Like ir and ser, the preterite forms of hacer have no...?
Accents.
400
In both English and Spanish, some of the pronouns that follow these prepositions are different from...?
The subject pronouns.
500
How do you determine the tense of a verb?
Context clues.
500
When is a double negative required?
When no precedes the verb.
500
Irregular verbs don't follow the pattern of...?
Regular verbs.
500
When you use mí and ti after the preposition con, they combine with con to form the words...?
conmigo and contigo.