Spanish verb conjugation dice game




















Spanish Verb Lotto is great for recapping and reviewing verb tenses and moods. You hand each student one of the custom playing boards and a pile of cards. They then spread these cards out face-down in front of them. The first player to get three different cards for each verb tense wins. In Dice Tic Tac Toe , each group gets a die and a worksheet. Each space in the tic-tac-toe board should have a different subject or verb definition.

Every board will correspond with a number and a verb give them a list so they know which number goes with which verb. The first student rolls the die, and chooses a subject that corresponds with the roll.

For example, if they roll a three, they pick a subject off the third tic-tac-toe board. They then conjugate the verb on a piece of paper and hand it to their partner. Set one team at the board, and the other about 10 feet away from the basket.

Give the students at the board a list of verbs, and give the other group the balls. The second group will try to make as many baskets as possible while the first group conjugates verbs the time is up when all the verbs are done. Unlike the other games on this list, Fiesta requires a little bit of creative design skills. Why, you ask? Well, the game requires a game board that is similar in style to Candy Land. Past Perfect. Future Perfect. Past Anterior. Affirmative Imperative. Negative Imperative.

Present Subjunctive. Future Subjunctive. Imperfect Subjunctive. Present Perfect Subjunctive. Future Perfect Subjunctive. Pluperfect Subjunctive. An infinitive is the basic verb form. In English we call it a verbal. It does not tell who is performing the action in a sentence person , or when the action is taking place tense. Note: Some Spanish words which are not verb forms also end in these letters, but they are not infinitives since they aren't verbs!

Example: Hablar, which means "to speak or to talk". To conjugate a verb in Spanish you drop the ending of the infinitive and add a new stem. Here are some examples. The endings are -o, -as, -a, -amos, -an in the present indicative tense. Here is an example with the verb "hablar".

The endings are —o, -es, -e, -emos, -en in the present indicative tense. Easel Assessments. Quizzes with auto-grading, and real-time student data. Browse Easel Assessments. Log In Join Us. View Wish List View Cart. Previous Next. Ray Cox 31 Followers. Grade Levels. It's good to leave some feedback.

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El tarro de los idiomas 4.



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