Spanish/How To Conjugate Verbs

Present Indicative edit

The Present Indicative is the most basic (though not the easiest) and essential tense in Spanish. There are more than few dozen irregular verbs with varying degrees of irregularities. It should be noted that all the second person informal conjugations end with s.

Regular Verbs edit

-AR Verbs edit

-AR verbs are conjugated by removing the "-ar" from the infinitive and adding the endings.

Yo              -o     Nosotros                  -amos
Tú             -as    Vosotros                 -áis
Usted,él,ella   -a     Ustedes,ellos,ellas       -an
Hablar (to speak) edit
hablo   hablamos
hablas  habláis
habla   hablan

-ER Verbs edit

Like the -AR verbs, -ER verbs are conjugated by removing the infinitive ending "-er" and adding the endings.

-o     -emos
-es    -éis
-e     -en
Beber (to drink) edit
bebo   bebemos
bebes  bebéis
bebe   beben
Hacer (to make) edit
hago   hacemos
haces  haceis
hace   hacen

-IR Verbs edit

-IR verbs are conjugated by removing the infinitive ending "-ir" and adding the endings.

-o     -imos
-es    -ís
-e     -en
Vivir (to live) edit
vivo   vivimos
vives  vivís
vive   viven

Irregular Verbs edit

Complete Irregularity edit

Ser (to be) edit
soy    somos
eres   sois
es     son
Estar (to be) edit
estoy  estamos
estás  estáis
está   están
Ir (to go) edit
voy    vamos
vas    vais
va     van
Haber (to have) edit
he     hemos
has    habéis
ha/hay han/hay

First Person Singular Irregularity edit

Some verbs only have irregularity in the first person singular forms.

Verbs with a -cir and -cer endings also replace the c in -cir and -cer with 'zc' in the first person singular form.

  • conocer (to know) - conozco
  • traducir (to translate) - traduzco
  • conducir (to drive) - conduzco

Some verbs end in -go instead of the regular -o for the first person singular form, these are completely irregular.

  • poner (to put) - pongo
  • salir (to leave) - salgo

Also, some verbs end in -jo instead of -o for the first person singular.

  • escoger (to choose) - escojo
  • corregir (to correct) - correjo

Four verbs are uniquely irregular only in the first person singular forms:

  • saber (to know) - sé
  • caber (to fit) - quepo
  • dar (to give) - doy
  • ver (to see) - veo

Stem Changes edit

Some verbs change their stems when conjugated in these forms: yo, tú, él, ella, usted, ellos, ellas, and ustedes. There are four stem changes in the present tense o to ue, u to ue, e to ie, and e to i. The e to i change only occurs in -IR verbs. The easy way to memorize the change in which forms is called "The Boot." It must be pointed out, however, that using memory techniques to learn a language can prevent one from ever learning the language fluently. Children don't use "tricks" to learn a language (did you?). The way to learn a language is to socially interact with those who speak the language you wish to learn. And remember, never, ever, translate, as it will irreparably impair your ability to learn a new language.

O to Ue - Dormir (to sleep) edit
duermo    dormimos
duermes   dormís
duerme    duermen
U to Ue - Jugar (to play) edit
juego     jugamos
juegas    jugáis
juega     juegan
E to Ie - Empezar (to begin) edit
empiezo   empezamos
empiezas  empezáis
empieza   empiezan
E to I - Pedir (to ask/TO ORDER) edit
pido      pedimos
pides     pedís
pide      piden

Imperfect edit

The Imperfect is the easiest tense to learn in Spanish because the conjugations are almost completely regular: there are 3 irregular verbs! In all conjugations of the Imperfect, the first person singular forms (yo) and the third person singular/second person polite forms are same. For example, "caminaba" can mean "he used to walk" or "I was walking."

Regular Verbs edit

-AR Verbs edit

-AR verbs are conjugated by removing the "-ar" and adding the following endings (note accent on nosotros form!):

-aba    -ábamos
-abas   -abais
-aba    -aban
Estudiar (to study) edit
estudiaba    estudiábamos
estudiabas   estudiabais
estudiaba    estudiaban

-ER Verbs edit

-ER and -IR Verbs are conjugated identically by removing the "-er" or "-ir" and adding the following endings (note accents on all forms!):

-ía    -íamos
-ías   -íais
-ía    -ían
Beber (to drink) edit
bebía    bebíamos
bebías   bebíais
bebía    bebían
Salir (to leave) edit
salía   salíamos
salías   salíais
salía    salían

Irregular Verbs edit

There are only 3 irregular verbs in the Imperfect tense: Ser, Ir, and Ver.

Ser (to be) edit

era    éramos
eras   erais
era    eran

Ir (to go) edit

iba    íbamos
ibas   ibais
iba    iban

Ver (to see) edit

veía    veíamos
veías   veíais
veía    veían

Preterite edit

Regular Verbs edit

-AR Verbs edit

-AR verbs are conjugated by removing the "-ar" from the infinitive and adding the endings.

-é     -amos
-aste    -asteis
-ó     -aron
Comprar (to buy) edit
compré     compramos
compraste  comprasteis
compró     compraron

-ER & IR Verbs edit

Like the -AR verbs, -ER & -IR verbs are conjugated by removing the infinitive ending "-er" or "-ir" and adding the endings.

-í     -imos
-iste    -isteis
-ió     -ieron
Comer (to eat) edit
comí       comimos
comiste    comisteis
com     comieron
Vivir (to live) edit
viví   vivimos
viviste  vivisteis
vivío   vivieron

Irregular Verbs edit

Note: Ir and Ser are identical in the Preterite

Ir (to go) and Ser (to be) edit

fui   fuimos
fuiste   fuisteis
fue  fueron

Tener (to have) edit

tuve   tuvimos
tuviste   tuvisteis
tuvo   tuvieron

Haber (to have auxiliary) edit

hube   hubimos
hubiste   hubisteis
hubo   hubieron

Future edit

In Spanish, especially in Latin American countries, it is more usual to utilise the ir + infinitive verb form (like going to) than the future conjugation.

Example edit
Yo "Voy a comer" instead of "Comeré"
Tu "Vas a comer" instead of "Comerás"
El "Va a comer" instead of "Comerá"
Nosotros "Vamos a comer" instead of "Comeremos"
Vosotros "Vais a comer" instead of "Comeréis"
Ellos "Van a comer" instead of "Comerán"

Still it is easy: Remember the present tense of verb "Haber" minus "h" and add to the infinitive form of the verb

The verb "Haber": he, has, ha, hemos, habéis, han

For future = é, ás, á, emos, éis, án
Example:Amar edit
Yo amaré
Tu amarás
El amará
Nosotros amaremos
Vosotros amaréis
Ellos amarán
Temer edit
Yo temeré
Tú temerás
Él temerá
Nosotros temeremos
Vosotros temeréis
Ellos temerán
Partir edit

Yo partiré .. partirás, partirá, partiremos, partiréis, partirán

An so on in many many verbs. There are exceptions but easy ones

Salir (exception it changes to saldr) Yo saldré, saldrás, saldrá, saldremos, saldréis, saldrán

Venir (exception it changes to vendr) Yo vendré, vendrás, vendrá, vendremos, vendréis, vendrán

Conditional edit

In this tense, the action is conditioned to something to happen. Use conditional for asking in polite form like in English with would. Or use it to form conditional expressions.

¿Vendrías a casa? = Would you like to come home?
¿Tomarías café? = Would you like to drink coffee?
Comería si tubiera hambre = I would eat if I was hungry.

-ar, -er and -ir verbs edit

ía   iamos
ías  íais
ía   ían

Amar

amaría  amaríamos
amarías amaríais
amaría  amarían

Temer

temería  temeríamos
temerías temeríais
temería  temerían

Partir

partiría  partiríamos
partirías partiríais
partiría  partirían

These changes in the conditional tense apply even to the verbs Ser, Estar and Ir!

Exceptions

Tener (changes to tendr): tendría, tendrías, tendríamos, tendríais, tendrían
Salir (changes to sald): saldría, saldrías, saldríamos, saldríais, saldrían
and so on

Present Subjunctive edit

Imperfect Subjunctive edit

Pluperfect edit

Preterite Perfect edit

The meaning is not the same as in English: Something that has been done in the past but still important in the present or continue by the moment.

Format

Haber verb + past participle of the verb

Examples that home (and still living today)

Viví en esa casa = I lived in that home (not now)
He tomado mucho = I had drunk a lot (now I'm  full)
Tomé mucho = I drank a lot (may be yesterday)
Viví mucho tiempo = wrong tense unless it was a ghost talking

Well usually in Latin America they almost never use this tense and mix the past perfect and simple past you have to adapt the meaning. Usually people from Spain use the tense properly but in Latin American to use this tense could show some fancy - elevated studies language that is not the normal rule or can be comic to some one from there.

Amar (to love)

he amado  hemos amado
has amado habéis amado
ha amado  han amado

Tomar (to drink)

he tomado  hemos tomado
has tomado habéis tomado
ha tomado  han tomado

and so on. There are no exceptions.

Future Perfect edit

Conditional Perfect edit

same as formal commands

Perfect Subjunctive edit

Commands edit

Commands are one of the easiest tenses to learn in Spanish because it has only few irregularities and there are only four forms (, usted, vosotros, and ustedes) instead of the regular six and relies on other conjugated forms.

Regular Verbs (tú and vosotros forms) edit

-AR, -ER, and -IR verbs edit

For any type of verb, simply change the form of the verb to the él/ella/Ud. form. For vosotros commands, add a "d".

Cerrar (to close) edit
cierra  cerrad
Traer (to bring) edit
trae  traed

Irregular Tú Commands edit

There are eight irregular commands. They are as follows:

Ir (to go) - ve                        Venir (to come) - ven  
Ser (to be) - sé                       Tener (to have) - ten
Hacer (to do/make) - haz               Decir (to say/tell) - di  
Poner (to put/place) - pon             Salir (to get out) - sal

Regular Verbs (Ud. and Uds. forms) edit

-AR verbs edit

For the -AR verbs, take the first person singular form (yo) and take off the -o and add the command endings to the stem.

-e    -en
Nadar (to swim) edit

I swim - Nado // You swim - Nades // He/she swims - Nade // we swim - nademos // they swim - naden //

-ER & -IR verbs edit

For the -ER and -IR verbs, take the first person singular form (yo) and take off the -o and add the command endings to the stem.

-a    -an
caber (to fit) - Irregular yo form quepo edit
quepa quepan
pedir (to ask for) - Stem change e to i edit
pida  pidan

Double Changes edit

Verbs that end in -car, -gar, and -zar which changes their endings to -que, -gue, and -ce, respectively

secar (to dry) edit
Seque  Sequen
jugar (to play) - Stem change u to ue edit
Juegue Jueguen

Irregular Verbs edit

Ser (to be) edit
Sea    Sean
Estar (to be) edit
Esté   Estén
Ir (to go) edit
Vaya  Vayan
Dar (to give) edit
Dé     Den
Saber (to know) edit
Sepa   Sepan