Usages of comprender
Estoy aprendiendo español cada día y comprendo más.
I am learning Spanish every day and I understand more.
¿Comprendes la canción que estoy cantando ahora?
Do you understand the song that I am singing now?
Él está muy contento porque comprende la lección.
He is very happy because he understands the lesson.
Comprendo más con mi libro verde.
I understand more with my green book.
Pregunto si mi hermano comprende la lección.
I ask if my brother understands the lesson.
Comprendo el significado del mensaje.
I understand the meaning of the message.
Comprendo la fórmula en mi libro verde.
I understand the formula in my green book.
Pido ayuda a mi primo cuando necesito comprender la lección.
I ask my cousin for help when I need to understand the lesson.
A veces fallo en comprender la lección.
Sometimes I fail to understand the lesson.
Ya comprendo la lección de hoy.
I already understand today’s lesson.
Nadie comprende la broma.
No one understands the joke.
No estudié con calma, por eso no comprendo la lección.
I didn't study calmly, that's why I don't understand the lesson.
La computadora facilita comprender la lección.
The computer makes it easy to understand the lesson.
Comprendo cada pronombre en la lección.
I understand every pronoun in the lesson.
Ya comprendo lo mucho que aprendo cuando practico todos los días.
I already understand how much I learn when I practice every day.
Yo sí comprendo la lección hoy.
I really do understand the lesson today.
Con paciencia, logro comprender cada lección difícil.
With patience, I manage to understand each difficult lesson.
Cuando discuto con mi hermano, intento comprender su razón antes de responder.
When I argue with my brother, I try to understand his reason before answering.
Ya comprendo lo básico de esta lección.
I already understand the basics of this lesson.
Comprendo mejor la obra cuando uso la guía.
I understand the work better when I use the guide.
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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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