water the flowers
water the flowers
An intransitive verb phrase is a phrase that combines a verb with a preposition or other particle and does not require a direct object (e.g. Everybody please stand up.).
1. (to put water on the flowers)
I forgot to water the flowers before I left on vacation.Se me olvidó regar las flores antes de irme de vacaciones.
A phrase is a group of words commonly used together (e.g once upon a time).
2. (imperative; used to address one person)
a. riega las flores (informal) (singular)
A word or phrase used to refer to the second person informal “tú” by their conjugation or implied context (e.g., How are you?).
Juanito, water the flowers. They're looking kind of dry.Juanito, riega las flores. Se ven algo secas.
b. riegue las flores (formal) (singular)
A word or phrase used to refer to the second person formal “usted” by their conjugation or implied context (e.g., usted).
Water the flowers in front of the house, please.Riegue las flores delante de la casa, por favor.
3. (imperative; used to address more than one person)
a. rieguen las flores (plural)
Hey kids, take these watering cans and water the flowers in the garden, please.Miren chicos, tomen estas regaderas y rieguen las flores del jardín, por favor.
Examples
Machine Translators
Translate water the flowers using machine translators
See Machine TranslationsRandom Word
Roll the dice and learn a new word now!
Get a WordWant to Learn Spanish?
Spanish learning for everyone. For free.
Translation
The world’s largest Spanish dictionary
Conjugation
Conjugations for every Spanish verb
Vocabulary
Learn vocabulary faster
Grammar
Learn every rule and exception
Pronunciation
Native-speaker video pronunciations
Word of the Day
el emparedado
sandwich
SpanishDict Premium
Have you tried it yet? Here's what's included:
Cheat sheets
No ads
Learn offline on iOS
Fun phrasebooks
Learn Spanish faster
Support SpanishDict
