![]() ![]() with Emilia.ĭaisy: Yeah, I’m fine, Alfie. ĭaisy: Sorry, Alfie, I’ve got to go – look, it’s Jack. Travelling the world for free and writing about it. But all jobs are boring if you do them every day.Īlfie: I don’t know. Her blog was one of the first travel blogs though.Īlfie: She got into blogging just at the right time then?ĭaisy: I guess so. The Past Participle of regular verbs in -er and -ir ends in -ido. She only started writing when she came back to England and met my dad. The Past Participle of regular verbs in -ar ends in -ado. yeah, I guess it is a dream job.ĭaisy: No, she was an English teacher for years, travelled around, worked in different countries. Use the following irregular participles to form prefect tenses in Spanish. The verb ser is irregular, meaning it does not follow a common conjugation pattern. Alfie’s just appeared! Speak soon.ĭaisy: Yeah, and now all the hotels ask her to write about them, the airlines give her free tickets, restaurants give her free meals and she goes on amazing trips. Past Participle Conditional Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Imperative By Gerald Erichsen Updated on FebruThe verb ser is one of the two Spanish verbs that mean 'to be.' The other one is the verb estar. Mum: He was always late, but he always had a great excuse!ĭaisy: Yeah, I can imagine. Verb Tense El Presente: The present tense El Futuro: The future tense El Pretrito Perfecto: The preterite tense (past tense, fixed) El Pretrito Imperfecto. Mum: I was just like you when I was with your dad. it’s OK though, he was late last time too. The airline was so nice, put me in Business Class.ĭaisy: Well, no. The plan was to meet at the café at 6, wasn’t it?ĭaisy: Hi, Mum, it’s me. Daisy: Jack? Where are you? I’m here at the café. ![]()
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