_____ aquí. Venir Venga Vengas Vens
Response: ¡Venga aquí!
Clarification: The implied subject in this command is "Usted," which represents the formal second person in Spanish, making the full expression "Venga usted aquí," indicating the imperative form of the verb "venir" that can be used without an explicit subject, as the form of conjugation signifies the subject. "¡Venga aquí!" means You, come here!
This is a command.
This question is incomplete. Your task is to finish the sentences using the future tense.
Response:
The correct responses are:
My mom will buy a coat.
You should go get your sunglasses.
Melissa will go for a bike ride.
I will be at home today.
Luis and Pilar will close the car windows.
You all will go swimming in the pool.
The kids will return early from the beach.
The tourists will use a raincoat in the hotel.
Reasoning:
In this instance, we observe verbs that are conjugated in the simple future tense. This tense is utilized to indicate an action that will take place, an intention, or a likelihood.
The appropriate conjugation of regular verbs in future tense involves modifying their root as follows:
Amar:
(yo) amaré
(tú) amarás
(él) amará
(ns) amaremos
(vs) amaréis
(ellos) amarán
Temer:
(yo) temeré
(tú) temerás
(él) temerá
(ns) temeremos
(vs) temeréis
(ellos) temerán
Partir:
(yo) partiré
(tú) partirás
(él) partirá
(ns) partiremos
(vs) partiréis
(ellos) partirán