-ir and -er ending verbs are very similar in their endings when they are conjugated. How do they differ in their endings when they are conjugated?

(4 points) SIMPLE ANSWER

The main difference between -ir and -er ending verbs when conjugated is in the third-person plural form. -Ir ending verbs take -en as their ending in the third-person plural, while -er ending verbs take -en as their ending in the second-person plural but -ent in the third-person plural.

shorter

The short answer is that -ir ending verbs have -en as their ending in the third-person plural, while -er ending verbs have -en as their ending in the second-person plural but -ent in the third-person plural.

-ir and -er ending verbs differ in their endings when they are conjugated in the present tense:

- For -ir ending verbs:
- The endings for the singular forms (-o, -es, -e) remain the same as the -er ending verbs.
- The plural forms, however, have a distinct ending (-imos, -ís, -en).

- For -er ending verbs:
- The endings for the singular forms (-o, -es, -e) are the same as the -ir ending verbs.
- The plural forms also have the same ending (-emos, -éis, -en) as the -ir ending verbs.

So, while both -ir and -er ending verbs have similar endings for the singular forms, they differ in the endings for the plural forms.