It yantaría: 1st and 3rd person singular and courtesy of the conditional of the verb singular 2nd yantar, from the classical latin ientare for breach, breakfast; at the beginning of the Spanish it meant lunch, lunch ( My Cid, Berceo and Arcipreste de Hita ): Grand yantar le facen to the good Campeador; / ring the bells in San but to cry. / by Castiella hearing are the proclamations / commo my Cid el Campeador will be ground. Then went to mean eating, drinking food, even dinner, as in Cervantes... The girls, who were not made to hear such rhetoric, did not respond Word; they just asked if I wanted to eat something. -Any yantaría I, said Don Quixote, because, what I understand, I would do much to the case