Choose the best answer to complete the sentence. Ready? |
los platos después de cenar. |
los platos después de cenar. |
Lava |
Lava |
Lava los platos después de cenar. |
Lava los platos después de cenar. |
"Wash the dishes after dinner." |
We use lava in this sentence because it's the regular imperative form used to give a command to one person using tú. |
Choose the best answer to complete the sentence. Ready? |
tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
Come |
Come |
Come tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
Come tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
"Eat your lunch before class." |
We use come because it's the regular imperative form of comer, used to tell someone informally to eat. |
Choose the best answer to complete the sentence. Ready? |
más agua cuando hace calor. |
más agua cuando hace calor. |
Bebe |
Bebe |
Bebe más agua cuando hace calor. |
Bebe más agua cuando hace calor. |
"Drink more water when it's hot." |
We use bebe because it's the regular imperative form of beber, used to give a command or suggestion to someone using tú. |
Unscramble the words to make a sentence. |
Ready? |
Estudia |
Estudia para |
Estudia para el |
Estudia para el examen |
Estudia para el examen de |
Estudia para el examen de mañana. |
"Study for tomorrow's test." |
Estudia para el examen de mañana. |
Choose the best answer to complete the sentence. Ready? |
(Abres or Abre) la puerta para tu abuela. |
(Abres or Abre) la puerta para tu abuela. |
Abre |
Abre |
Abre la puerta para tu abuela. |
"Open the door for your grandma." |
We use abre in this sentence because it's the imperative form used for giving a direct instruction to tú. |
Abres is incorrect here because it's the present indicative form, not the imperative. It means "you open" as a statement, not a command. Imperative sentences use the base verb form without the subject pronoun. |
Choose the best answer to complete the sentence. Ready? |
(Camina or Caminas) con cuidado en la calle. |
(Camina or Caminas) con cuidado en la calle. |
Camina |
Camina |
Camina con cuidado en la calle. |
"Walk carefully in the street." |
We use camina in this sentence because it's a tú imperative, used to give a direct command or instruction to someone. |
Caminas is incorrect here because it is the present indicative form, which describes what someone is doing — "you walk." It's not used for giving commands. The imperative mood uses a different form to directly tell someone what to do. |
Let's translate some sentences into Spanish. |
Translate "Write your name on the sheet." into Spanish. |
escribe, "write" (imperative form for tú) |
followed by |
tu nombre, "your name" |
next |
en, "on" |
followed by |
la hoja, "the sheet" |
We use escribe in this sentence because it's a command directed at tú, telling them to write. |
Escribe tu nombre en la hoja. |
Escribe tu nombre en la hoja. |
"Write your name on the sheet." |
Translate "Listen to the song and sing with me." into Spanish. |
escucha, "listen" (imperative form for tú) |
followed by |
la canción, "the song" |
next |
y, "and" |
followed by |
canta, "sing" (imperative form for tú) |
next |
conmigo, "with me" |
We use escucha in this sentence because it's the imperative form of escuchar, which is used to tell someone to listen. |
Escucha la canción y canta conmigo. |
Escucha la canción y canta conmigo. |
"Listen to the song and sing with me." |
Translate "Teach me how to cook something easy." into Spanish. |
enséñame, "teach me" (imperative for tú + object pronoun me) |
followed by |
a cocinar, "to cook" |
next |
algo, "something" |
followed by |
fácil, "easy" |
We use enséñame in this sentence because it's a tú command with a pronoun attached, used to say "Teach me." |
Enséñame a cocinar algo fácil. |
Enséñame a cocinar algo fácil. |
"Teach me how to cook something easy." |
Listen to me as I speak. Which verb in the imperative mood do you hear? |
Come tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
Let's listen one more time. |
Come tu almuerzo antes de la clase. |
Did you hear, come? Come, meaning "eat," is the imperative form used to give a direct command to tú, the informal "you." |
How about...? |
Estudia para el examen de mañana. |
Let's listen one more time. |
Estudia para el examen de mañana. |
Did you hear, estudia? Estudia, meaning "study," is a tú command—an imperative form used to tell one person what to do. |
Next… |
Camina con cuidado en la calle. |
One more time. |
Camina con cuidado en la calle. |
Did you hear, camina? Camina, meaning "walk," is used here as a command in the imperative mood for the pronoun tú. |
And... |
Enséñame a cocinar algo fácil. |
One more time. |
Enséñame a cocinar algo fácil. |
Did you hear, enséñame? Enséñame, meaning "teach me," is the tú command form of enseñar, with me attached as a pronoun to show who is being taught. |
Thank you for watching. |
Now you know how to ask someone to do something in Spanish. |
...and now you can move on to the next lesson in the pathway. |
Nos vemos. |
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