Questions & Answers about Camino por la calle cada día.
Why is “camino” used here, not “camina”?
“Camino” is the first-person singular form of the verb “caminar” in the simple present tense, meaning “I walk.” “Camina” would be the third-person singular (he/she/it walks) or the formal second-person singular (you walk, using “usted”). Since the subject here is “yo” (I), “camino” is correct.
What does “por la calle” imply as opposed to “en la calle”?
Is there a difference between “todos los días” and “cada día”?
Does “camino” ever mean something else in Spanish?
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“How does verb conjugation work in Spanish?”
Spanish verbs change form based on the subject, tense, and mood. Regular verbs follow predictable patterns depending on whether they end in ‑ar, ‑er, or ‑ir. For example, "hablar" (to speak) becomes "hablo" (I speak), "hablas" (you speak), and "habla" (he/she speaks) in the present tense.
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