CAS LS 112 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Possessive Determiner, Preterite
Document Summary
Adjectivos posesivos y numeros ordinales: possessive adjectives and ordinal #s: adjectivos posesivos mi: my your(vosotros): vuestro/a your: tu (informal) your/their(plural): su his/her/your: su (formal) our: nuestro/a. *possessive adjectives adhere to the noun, not the person. ex. *if the noun is plural, add a (s) to the end of the possessive adjective. ex. Nuestras abuelas van a espa a: numeros ordinales primero: first septimo: seventh segundo: second octavo: eigth tercero: third noveno: ninth cuarto: fourth decimo: tenth qiunto: fifth undecimo: eleventh sexto: sixth duodecimo: twelfth. *for primero and tercero, drop the o when the noun is masculine. Preterite: generally speaking, the preterite is used for actions in the past that are seen as completed. Use of the preterite tense implies that the past action had a definite beginning and definite end. Imperfect: generally speaking, the imperfect is used for actions in the past that are not seen as completed.