[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-article-local-spanish-subjunctive-conjugation-guide":3,"$fHZsWYl_LcdVZ5GxKwtR-ZqvCZbbUdo2_Fi6R_GQKiQM":4,"blog-article-cms-spanish-subjunctive-conjugation-guide":6,"article-hreflang-spanish-subjunctive-conjugation-guide":1113,"blog-article-related-spanish-subjunctive-conjugation-guide":1114},null,{"approximate_member_count":5},20342,{"id":7,"documentId":8,"title":9,"description":10,"timestampUnix":11,"slug":12,"h1":9,"image":13,"tags":19,"lang":3,"body":24,"createdAt":1107,"updatedAt":1108,"publishedAt":1109,"category":1110,"featured":1111,"timestamp":1112,"locale":-1,"_dir":1110},6719,"wl605e67cvk5ohdea5l730s2","How to Conjugate the Spanish Subjunctive (complete Guide)","Learn subjunctive conjugation in Spanish with step-by-step rules, charts for -AR\u002F-ER\u002F-IR verbs, irregular forms, and practical examples. Master this tricky verb mood.","1777309200000","spanish-subjunctive-conjugation-guide",{"alt":14,"src":15,"width":16,"height":17,"previewOnly":18},"How to conjugate the Spanish subjunctive - Banner","https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku-cms-assets.migaku.com\u002FWoman_Reading_In_A_Library_f65e708d1c\u002FWoman_Reading_In_A_Library_f65e708d1c.jpg",1000,505,false,[20,21,22,23],"fundamentals","vocabulary","phrases","grammar",{"data":25,"body":28,"toc":1075},{"title":26,"description":27},"","The Spanish subjunctive freaks out a lot of learners. I get it. You're cruising along with your present and past tense verbs, feeling pretty good about your progress, and then someone tells you there's this whole other verb mood that follows completely different rules. Fun times, right?",{"type":29,"children":30},"root",[31,38,54,59,63,70,75,80,85,91,96,107,117,127,132,139,144,149,184,189,195,200,233,238,271,276,282,287,292,297,302,307,313,318,324,329,334,367,372,405,411,416,421,454,459,492,497,530,536,541,547,552,585,591,596,629,634,640,645,678,684,689,722,728,733,766,771,777,782,815,821,826,832,837,842,848,853,858,864,869,874,880,885,890,896,901,906,911,916,921,927,932,946,959,972,980,1013,1019,1024,1029,1034,1039,1045,1050,1055,1069],{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":34,"children":35},"element","p",{},[36],{"type":37,"value":27},"text",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":39,"children":40},{},[41,43,52],{"type":37,"value":42},"Here's the thing, though. The subjunctive conjugation actually follows some pretty predictable patterns once you understand the system. Yeah, there are irregular verbs to memorize (because of course there are), but the basic formation process is straightforward. You just need someone to walk you through it without all the grammar ",{"type":32,"tag":44,"props":45,"children":49},"a",{"href":46,"rel":47},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Fblog\u002Fspanish\u002Fbest-spanish-shows-guide",[48],"nofollow",[50],{"type":37,"value":51},"textbook",{"type":37,"value":53}," nonsense.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":55,"children":56},{},[57],{"type":37,"value":58},"That's what this lesson is all about. I'm going to show you exactly how to conjugate the present subjunctive in Spanish, give you the conjugation charts you actually need, and explain which verbs follow the regular patterns and which ones do their own weird thing. By the end, you'll have a solid foundation for using subjunctive forms in real Spanish conversations.",{"type":32,"tag":60,"props":61,"children":62},"toc",{},[],{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":65,"children":67},"h2",{"id":66},"what-is-the-subjunctive-anyway",[68],{"type":37,"value":69},"What Is the Subjunctive Anyway?",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":71,"children":72},{},[73],{"type":37,"value":74},"Before we dive into conjugation tables, let's talk about what the subjunctive actually does. In Spanish, the subjunctive is a verb mood (not a tense) that you use to express things that aren't concrete facts. We're talking about desires, doubts, emotions, possibilities, and hypothetical situations.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":76,"children":77},{},[78],{"type":37,"value":79},"The indicative mood, which is what you've been using for most of your Spanish learning, deals with facts and certainty. \"Ella habla español\" (She speaks Spanish) uses the indicative because it's stating a fact. But \"Espero que ella hable español\" (I hope that she speaks Spanish) uses the subjunctive \"hable\" because we're expressing a hope, not a confirmed reality.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":81,"children":82},{},[83],{"type":37,"value":84},"The subjunctive shows up in four main forms: present subjunctive, imperfect subjunctive, present perfect subjunctive, and pluperfect subjunctive. This guide focuses on the present subjunctive since that's what you'll use about 80% of the time.",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":86,"children":88},{"id":87},"the-basic-formation-rule-for-present-subjunctive",[89],{"type":37,"value":90},"The Basic Formation Rule for Present Subjunctive",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":92,"children":93},{},[94],{"type":37,"value":95},"Here's your step-by-step process for conjugating regular verbs in the present subjunctive. This works for the vast majority of Spanish verbs:",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":97,"children":98},{},[99,105],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":101,"children":102},"strong",{},[103],{"type":37,"value":104},"Step 1:",{"type":37,"value":106}," Take the present indicative \"yo\" form of the verb",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":108,"children":109},{},[110,115],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":111,"children":112},{},[113],{"type":37,"value":114},"Step 2:",{"type":37,"value":116}," Drop the final \"o\"",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":118,"children":119},{},[120,125],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":121,"children":122},{},[123],{"type":37,"value":124},"Step 3:",{"type":37,"value":126}," Add the subjunctive endings",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":128,"children":129},{},[130],{"type":37,"value":131},"The trick here is that the endings basically flip. Verbs ending in -ar take endings that look like -er\u002F-ir verbs, and -er\u002F-ir verbs take endings that look like -ar verbs. Pretty cool how that works.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":134,"children":136},"h3",{"id":135},"conjugation-endings-for-ar-verbs",[137],{"type":37,"value":138},"Conjugation Endings for -AR Verbs",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":140,"children":141},{},[142],{"type":37,"value":143},"Let's start with \"hablar\" (to speak). The \"yo\" form in present indicative is \"hablo.\" Drop the \"o\" and you get \"habl-\" as your stem.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":145,"children":146},{},[147],{"type":37,"value":148},"Now add these endings:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":151,"children":152},"ul",{},[153,159,164,169,174,179],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":155,"children":156},"li",{},[157],{"type":37,"value":158},"yo hable",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":160,"children":161},{},[162],{"type":37,"value":163},"tú hables",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":165,"children":166},{},[167],{"type":37,"value":168},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted hable",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":170,"children":171},{},[172],{"type":37,"value":173},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras hablemos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":175,"children":176},{},[177],{"type":37,"value":178},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras habléis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":180,"children":181},{},[182],{"type":37,"value":183},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes hablen",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":185,"children":186},{},[187],{"type":37,"value":188},"Notice that \"yo\" and \"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted\" forms are identical. You'll need context to tell them apart in actual sentences.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":190,"children":192},{"id":191},"conjugation-endings-for-er-and-ir-verbs",[193],{"type":37,"value":194},"Conjugation Endings for -ER and -IR Verbs",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":196,"children":197},{},[198],{"type":37,"value":199},"For -er verbs like \"comer\" (to eat), take the \"yo\" form \"como,\" drop the \"o,\" and add these endings to \"com-\":",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":201,"children":202},{},[203,208,213,218,223,228],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":204,"children":205},{},[206],{"type":37,"value":207},"yo coma",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":209,"children":210},{},[211],{"type":37,"value":212},"tú comas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":214,"children":215},{},[216],{"type":37,"value":217},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted coma",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":219,"children":220},{},[221],{"type":37,"value":222},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras comamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":224,"children":225},{},[226],{"type":37,"value":227},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras comáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":229,"children":230},{},[231],{"type":37,"value":232},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes coman",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":234,"children":235},{},[236],{"type":37,"value":237},"For -ir verbs like \"vivir\" (to live), take \"vivo,\" drop the \"o,\" and add the same endings to \"viv-\":",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":239,"children":240},{},[241,246,251,256,261,266],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":242,"children":243},{},[244],{"type":37,"value":245},"yo viva",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":247,"children":248},{},[249],{"type":37,"value":250},"tú vivas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":252,"children":253},{},[254],{"type":37,"value":255},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted viva",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":257,"children":258},{},[259],{"type":37,"value":260},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras vivamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":262,"children":263},{},[264],{"type":37,"value":265},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras viváis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":267,"children":268},{},[269],{"type":37,"value":270},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes vivan",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":272,"children":273},{},[274],{"type":37,"value":275},"The -er and -ir verbs use identical endings in the subjunctive. That's one less thing to memorize, at least.",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":277,"children":279},{"id":278},"why-starting-from-the-yo-form-matters",[280],{"type":37,"value":281},"Why Starting from the \"Yo\" Form Matters",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":283,"children":284},{},[285],{"type":37,"value":286},"You might be wondering why we start with the \"yo\" form of the present indicative. Can't we just use the infinitive?",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":288,"children":289},{},[290],{"type":37,"value":291},"Nope. Starting from the \"yo\" form is crucial because it captures any irregularities or stem changes that carry over into the subjunctive. This rule saves you from having to memorize separate irregular subjunctive forms for tons of verbs.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":293,"children":294},{},[295],{"type":37,"value":296},"Take \"tener\" (to have). The \"yo\" form is \"tengo,\" which is irregular. When you form the subjunctive, you keep that \"g\": tenga, tengas, tenga, tengamos, tengáis, tengan. If you tried to form it from the infinitive \"tener,\" you'd get the wrong forms.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":298,"children":299},{},[300],{"type":37,"value":301},"Same deal with \"conocer\" (to know). The \"yo\" form is \"conozco\" with that \"zc\" insertion. The subjunctive becomes: conozca, conozcas, conozca, conozcamos, conozcáis, conozcan.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":303,"children":304},{},[305],{"type":37,"value":306},"This pattern works for the majority of Spanish verbs, which is honestly pretty convenient.",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":308,"children":310},{"id":309},"stem-changing-verbs-in-the-subjunctive",[311],{"type":37,"value":312},"Stem-Changing Verbs in the Subjunctive",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":314,"children":315},{},[316],{"type":37,"value":317},"Stem-changing verbs (also called boot verbs because of how the changes look in conjugation charts) need some extra attention. Most stem changes from the present indicative carry through to the present subjunctive, but with a twist for -ir verbs.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":319,"children":321},{"id":320},"ar-and-er-stem-changing-verbs",[322],{"type":37,"value":323},"-AR and -ER Stem-Changing Verbs",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":325,"children":326},{},[327],{"type":37,"value":328},"For -ar and -er stem-changing verbs, the stem change happens in all forms except \"nosotros\" and \"vosotros,\" just like in the indicative.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":330,"children":331},{},[332],{"type":37,"value":333},"\"Pensar\" (to think) changes e to ie. The subjunctive forms are:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":335,"children":336},{},[337,342,347,352,357,362],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":338,"children":339},{},[340],{"type":37,"value":341},"yo piense",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":343,"children":344},{},[345],{"type":37,"value":346},"tú pienses",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":348,"children":349},{},[350],{"type":37,"value":351},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted piense",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":353,"children":354},{},[355],{"type":37,"value":356},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras pensemos (no stem change)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":358,"children":359},{},[360],{"type":37,"value":361},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras penséis (no stem change)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":363,"children":364},{},[365],{"type":37,"value":366},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes piensen",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":368,"children":369},{},[370],{"type":37,"value":371},"\"Volver\" (to return) changes o to ue:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":373,"children":374},{},[375,380,385,390,395,400],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":376,"children":377},{},[378],{"type":37,"value":379},"yo vuelva",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":381,"children":382},{},[383],{"type":37,"value":384},"tú vuelvas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":386,"children":387},{},[388],{"type":37,"value":389},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted vuelva",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":391,"children":392},{},[393],{"type":37,"value":394},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras volvamos (no stem change)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":396,"children":397},{},[398],{"type":37,"value":399},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras volváis (no stem change)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":401,"children":402},{},[403],{"type":37,"value":404},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes vuelvan",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":406,"children":408},{"id":407},"ir-stem-changing-verbs",[409],{"type":37,"value":410},"-IR Stem-Changing Verbs",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":412,"children":413},{},[414],{"type":37,"value":415},"Here's where things get interesting. With -ir stem-changing verbs, you get the normal stem change in most forms, but the \"nosotros\" and \"vosotros\" forms have their own special stem change.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":417,"children":418},{},[419],{"type":37,"value":420},"\"Sentir\" (to feel) changes e to ie in most forms, but e to i in the nosotros and vosotros forms:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":422,"children":423},{},[424,429,434,439,444,449],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":425,"children":426},{},[427],{"type":37,"value":428},"yo sienta",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":430,"children":431},{},[432],{"type":37,"value":433},"tú sientas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":435,"children":436},{},[437],{"type":37,"value":438},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted sienta",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":440,"children":441},{},[442],{"type":37,"value":443},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras sintamos (i, not ie)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":445,"children":446},{},[447],{"type":37,"value":448},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras sintáis (i, not ie)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":450,"children":451},{},[452],{"type":37,"value":453},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes sientan",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":455,"children":456},{},[457],{"type":37,"value":458},"\"Dormir\" (to sleep) changes o to ue in most forms, but o to u in nosotros and vosotros:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":460,"children":461},{},[462,467,472,477,482,487],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":463,"children":464},{},[465],{"type":37,"value":466},"yo duerma",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":468,"children":469},{},[470],{"type":37,"value":471},"tú duermas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":473,"children":474},{},[475],{"type":37,"value":476},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted duerma",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":478,"children":479},{},[480],{"type":37,"value":481},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras durmamos (u, not ue)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":483,"children":484},{},[485],{"type":37,"value":486},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras durmáis (u, not ue)",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":488,"children":489},{},[490],{"type":37,"value":491},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes duerman",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":493,"children":494},{},[495],{"type":37,"value":496},"\"Pedir\" (to ask for) changes e to i in all forms:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":498,"children":499},{},[500,505,510,515,520,525],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":501,"children":502},{},[503],{"type":37,"value":504},"yo pida",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":506,"children":507},{},[508],{"type":37,"value":509},"tú pidas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":511,"children":512},{},[513],{"type":37,"value":514},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted pida",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":516,"children":517},{},[518],{"type":37,"value":519},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras pidamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":521,"children":522},{},[523],{"type":37,"value":524},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras pidáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":526,"children":527},{},[528],{"type":37,"value":529},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes pidan",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":531,"children":533},{"id":532},"irregular-verbs-in-the-present-subjunctive",[534],{"type":37,"value":535},"Irregular Verbs in the Present Subjunctive",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":537,"children":538},{},[539],{"type":37,"value":540},"Some verbs just refuse to play by the rules. There are six truly irregular verbs in the present subjunctive that you need to memorize separately because they don't follow the \"yo form minus o\" pattern.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":542,"children":544},{"id":543},"ser-to-be",[545],{"type":37,"value":546},"Ser (to be)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":548,"children":549},{},[550],{"type":37,"value":551},"The subjunctive forms of \"ser\" are:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":553,"children":554},{},[555,560,565,570,575,580],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":556,"children":557},{},[558],{"type":37,"value":559},"yo sea",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":561,"children":562},{},[563],{"type":37,"value":564},"tú seas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":566,"children":567},{},[568],{"type":37,"value":569},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted sea",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":571,"children":572},{},[573],{"type":37,"value":574},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras seamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":576,"children":577},{},[578],{"type":37,"value":579},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras seáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":581,"children":582},{},[583],{"type":37,"value":584},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes sean",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":586,"children":588},{"id":587},"estar-to-be",[589],{"type":37,"value":590},"Estar (to be)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":592,"children":593},{},[594],{"type":37,"value":595},"\"Estar\" looks like this:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":597,"children":598},{},[599,604,609,614,619,624],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":600,"children":601},{},[602],{"type":37,"value":603},"yo esté",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":605,"children":606},{},[607],{"type":37,"value":608},"tú estés",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":610,"children":611},{},[612],{"type":37,"value":613},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted esté",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":615,"children":616},{},[617],{"type":37,"value":618},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras estemos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":620,"children":621},{},[622],{"type":37,"value":623},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras estéis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":625,"children":626},{},[627],{"type":37,"value":628},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes estén",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":630,"children":631},{},[632],{"type":37,"value":633},"Notice the accent marks on all forms. Those are important for pronunciation.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":635,"children":637},{"id":636},"ir-to-go",[638],{"type":37,"value":639},"Ir (to go)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":641,"children":642},{},[643],{"type":37,"value":644},"\"Ir\" has these forms:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":646,"children":647},{},[648,653,658,663,668,673],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":649,"children":650},{},[651],{"type":37,"value":652},"yo vaya",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":654,"children":655},{},[656],{"type":37,"value":657},"tú vayas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":659,"children":660},{},[661],{"type":37,"value":662},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted vaya",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":664,"children":665},{},[666],{"type":37,"value":667},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras vayamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":669,"children":670},{},[671],{"type":37,"value":672},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras vayáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":674,"children":675},{},[676],{"type":37,"value":677},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes vayan",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":679,"children":681},{"id":680},"saber-to-know",[682],{"type":37,"value":683},"Saber (to know)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":685,"children":686},{},[687],{"type":37,"value":688},"\"Saber\" conjugates to:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":690,"children":691},{},[692,697,702,707,712,717],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":693,"children":694},{},[695],{"type":37,"value":696},"yo sepa",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":698,"children":699},{},[700],{"type":37,"value":701},"tú sepas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":703,"children":704},{},[705],{"type":37,"value":706},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted sepa",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":708,"children":709},{},[710],{"type":37,"value":711},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras sepamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":713,"children":714},{},[715],{"type":37,"value":716},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras sepáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":718,"children":719},{},[720],{"type":37,"value":721},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes sepan",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":723,"children":725},{"id":724},"haber-to-have-auxiliary-verb",[726],{"type":37,"value":727},"Haber (to have, auxiliary verb)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":729,"children":730},{},[731],{"type":37,"value":732},"The subjunctive conjugation of \"haber\" is:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":734,"children":735},{},[736,741,746,751,756,761],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":737,"children":738},{},[739],{"type":37,"value":740},"yo haya",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":742,"children":743},{},[744],{"type":37,"value":745},"tú hayas",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":747,"children":748},{},[749],{"type":37,"value":750},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted haya",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":752,"children":753},{},[754],{"type":37,"value":755},"nosotros\u002Fnosotros hayamos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":757,"children":758},{},[759],{"type":37,"value":760},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras hayáis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":762,"children":763},{},[764],{"type":37,"value":765},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes hayan",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":767,"children":768},{},[769],{"type":37,"value":770},"You'll use \"haya\" constantly for forming perfect tenses in the subjunctive, like \"Espero que hayas comido\" (I hope you have eaten).",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":772,"children":774},{"id":773},"dar-to-give",[775],{"type":37,"value":776},"Dar (to give)",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":778,"children":779},{},[780],{"type":37,"value":781},"\"Dar\" is weird because it's an -ar verb but takes -er\u002F-ir endings in the subjunctive:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":783,"children":784},{},[785,790,795,800,805,810],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":786,"children":787},{},[788],{"type":37,"value":789},"yo dé (with accent to distinguish from \"de\")",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":791,"children":792},{},[793],{"type":37,"value":794},"tú des",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":796,"children":797},{},[798],{"type":37,"value":799},"él\u002Fella\u002Fusted dé",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":801,"children":802},{},[803],{"type":37,"value":804},"nosotros\u002Fnosotras demos",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":806,"children":807},{},[808],{"type":37,"value":809},"vosotros\u002Fvosotras deis",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":811,"children":812},{},[813],{"type":37,"value":814},"ellos\u002Fellas\u002Fustedes den",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":816,"children":818},{"id":817},"when-do-you-actually-use-the-subjunctive",[819],{"type":37,"value":820},"When Do You Actually Use the Subjunctive?",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":822,"children":823},{},[824],{"type":37,"value":825},"Knowing how to conjugate these forms is one thing. Knowing when to use them is another. The subjunctive appears in specific grammatical situations, usually in dependent clauses after certain triggers.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":827,"children":829},{"id":828},"desire-and-influence",[830],{"type":37,"value":831},"Desire and Influence",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":833,"children":834},{},[835],{"type":37,"value":836},"When you want someone to do something or hope for an outcome, you use the subjunctive after verbs like \"querer\" (to want), \"desear\" (to wish), \"esperar\" (to hope), \"preferir\" (to prefer), and \"necesitar\" (to need).",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":838,"children":839},{},[840],{"type":37,"value":841},"Example: \"Quiero que hables más despacio\" (I want you to speak more slowly). The main clause \"quiero\" triggers the subjunctive \"hables\" in the dependent clause.",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":843,"children":845},{"id":844},"doubt-and-denial",[846],{"type":37,"value":847},"Doubt and Denial",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":849,"children":850},{},[851],{"type":37,"value":852},"Expressions of doubt, uncertainty, or denial trigger the subjunctive. This includes \"dudar\" (to doubt), \"no creer\" (to not believe), \"no pensar\" (to not think), and \"negar\" (to deny).",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":854,"children":855},{},[856],{"type":37,"value":857},"Example: \"Dudo que él venga mañana\" (I doubt that he's coming tomorrow). The doubt expressed by \"dudo\" requires the subjunctive \"venga.\"",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":859,"children":861},{"id":860},"emotion",[862],{"type":37,"value":863},"Emotion",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":865,"children":866},{},[867],{"type":37,"value":868},"When you express emotion about something, the subjunctive follows. This includes \"alegrarse de que\" (to be happy that), \"temer que\" (to fear that), \"estar triste de que\" (to be sad that), and \"sorprender que\" (to surprise that).",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":870,"children":871},{},[872],{"type":37,"value":873},"Example: \"Me alegro de que estés aquí\" (I'm happy that you're here). The emotion \"me alegro\" triggers the subjunctive \"estés.\"",{"type":32,"tag":133,"props":875,"children":877},{"id":876},"impersonal-expressions",[878],{"type":37,"value":879},"Impersonal Expressions",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":881,"children":882},{},[883],{"type":37,"value":884},"Phrases like \"es importante que\" (it's important that), \"es necesario que\" (it's necessary that), \"es posible que\" (it's possible that), and \"es mejor que\" (it's better that) require the subjunctive.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":886,"children":887},{},[888],{"type":37,"value":889},"Example: \"Es importante que estudies para el examen\" (It's important that you study for the exam).",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":891,"children":893},{"id":892},"how-to-tell-if-a-spanish-sentence-uses-subjunctive",[894],{"type":37,"value":895},"How to Tell if a Spanish Sentence Uses Subjunctive",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":897,"children":898},{},[899],{"type":37,"value":900},"If you're reading Spanish and trying to identify whether a verb is in the subjunctive, look for these clues:",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":902,"children":903},{},[904],{"type":37,"value":905},"First, check if there's a dependent clause introduced by \"que.\" The subjunctive almost always appears after \"que\" in dependent clauses.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":907,"children":908},{},[909],{"type":37,"value":910},"Second, look at the main verb. Does it express want, doubt, emotion, or an impersonal expression? Those are your typical triggers.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":912,"children":913},{},[914],{"type":37,"value":915},"Third, examine the verb ending. If you see an -ar verb with -e endings or an -er\u002F-ir verb with -a endings, that's probably subjunctive.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":917,"children":918},{},[919],{"type":37,"value":920},"Example sentence: \"Espero que tengas un buen día\" (I hope you have a good day). The main verb \"espero\" expresses hope, there's a \"que\" introducing the dependent clause, and \"tengas\" has an -a ending even though \"tener\" is an -er verb. All signs point to subjunctive.",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":922,"children":924},{"id":923},"quick-reference-conjugation-chart",[925],{"type":37,"value":926},"Quick Reference Conjugation Chart",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":928,"children":929},{},[930],{"type":37,"value":931},"Here's a chart you can bookmark for quick reference:",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":933,"children":934},{},[935,940,944],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":936,"children":937},{},[938],{"type":37,"value":939},"Regular -AR verb (hablar):",{"type":32,"tag":941,"props":942,"children":943},"br",{},[],{"type":37,"value":945},"\nhable, hables, hable, hablemos, habléis, hablen",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":947,"children":948},{},[949,954,957],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":950,"children":951},{},[952],{"type":37,"value":953},"Regular -ER verb (comer):",{"type":32,"tag":941,"props":955,"children":956},{},[],{"type":37,"value":958},"\ncoma, comas, coma, comamos, comáis, coman",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":960,"children":961},{},[962,967,970],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":963,"children":964},{},[965],{"type":37,"value":966},"Regular -IR verb (vivir):",{"type":32,"tag":941,"props":968,"children":969},{},[],{"type":37,"value":971},"\nviva, vivas, viva, vivamos, viváis, vivan",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":973,"children":974},{},[975],{"type":32,"tag":100,"props":976,"children":977},{},[978],{"type":37,"value":979},"Irregular verbs:",{"type":32,"tag":150,"props":981,"children":982},{},[983,988,993,998,1003,1008],{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":984,"children":985},{},[986],{"type":37,"value":987},"ser: sea, seas, sea, seamos, seáis, sean",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":989,"children":990},{},[991],{"type":37,"value":992},"estar: esté, estés, esté, estemos, estéis, estén",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":994,"children":995},{},[996],{"type":37,"value":997},"ir: vaya, vayas, vaya, vayamos, vayáis, vayan",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":999,"children":1000},{},[1001],{"type":37,"value":1002},"saber: sepa, sepas, sepa, sepamos, sepáis, sepan",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":1004,"children":1005},{},[1006],{"type":37,"value":1007},"haber: haya, hayas, haya, hayamos, hayáis, hayan",{"type":32,"tag":154,"props":1009,"children":1010},{},[1011],{"type":37,"value":1012},"dar: dé, des, dé, demos, deis, den",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":1014,"children":1016},{"id":1015},"common-mistakes-to-avoid",[1017],{"type":37,"value":1018},"Common Mistakes to Avoid",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1020,"children":1021},{},[1022],{"type":37,"value":1023},"One mistake I see all the time is learners trying to form the subjunctive directly from the infinitive instead of the \"yo\" form. This leads to incorrect forms for verbs with irregular \"yo\" forms. Always start with that present indicative \"yo\" form.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1025,"children":1026},{},[1027],{"type":37,"value":1028},"Another issue is forgetting that -ir stem-changing verbs have that extra stem change in the nosotros and vosotros forms. \"Sintamos\" and \"durmamos\" trip people up constantly.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1030,"children":1031},{},[1032],{"type":37,"value":1033},"Also, don't forget those completely irregular verbs. \"Ser,\" \"estar,\" \"ir,\" \"saber,\" \"haber,\" and \"dar\" just have to be memorized. There's no shortcut.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1035,"children":1036},{},[1037],{"type":37,"value":1038},"Finally, remember that the subjunctive is a mood, not a tense. You can have subjunctive in present, past, and perfect forms. This lesson covered the present subjunctive, which is the most common form, but the other forms exist too.",{"type":32,"tag":64,"props":1040,"children":1042},{"id":1041},"practice-makes-progress",[1043],{"type":37,"value":1044},"Practice Makes Progress",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1046,"children":1047},{},[1048],{"type":37,"value":1049},"The subjunctive takes time to feel natural. When you're learning Spanish through immersion, you'll start noticing these verb forms everywhere. Pay attention to them in context. See how native speakers use \"quiero que,\" \"espero que,\" and \"es importante que\" in real conversations.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1051,"children":1052},{},[1053],{"type":37,"value":1054},"The grammar rules give you the foundation, but actual exposure to Spanish content is what makes these patterns stick. You need to see hundreds of example sentences before your brain stops having to consciously think about whether to use subjunctive or indicative.",{"type":32,"tag":33,"props":1056,"children":1057},{},[1058,1060,1067],{"type":37,"value":1059},"Anyway, if you want to ",{"type":32,"tag":44,"props":1061,"children":1064},{"href":1062,"rel":1063},"https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku.com\u002Fblog\u002Fspanish\u002Fget-started-in-spanish",[48],[1065],{"type":37,"value":1066},"learn Spanish",{"type":37,"value":1068}," through real content while getting instant help with verb forms and conjugations, Migaku's browser extension lets you look up any word while watching Spanish shows or reading articles. You can see subjunctive verbs in context and save them for review later. There's a 10-day free trial if you want to check it out.",{"type":32,"tag":1070,"props":1071,"children":1074},"prose-button",{"href":1072,"text":1073},"\u002Flearn-spanish","Learn Spanish with Migaku",[],{"title":26,"searchDepth":1076,"depth":1076,"links":1077},2,[1078,1079,1084,1085,1089,1097,1103,1104,1105,1106],{"id":66,"depth":1076,"text":69},{"id":87,"depth":1076,"text":90,"children":1080},[1081,1083],{"id":135,"depth":1082,"text":138},3,{"id":191,"depth":1082,"text":194},{"id":278,"depth":1076,"text":281},{"id":309,"depth":1076,"text":312,"children":1086},[1087,1088],{"id":320,"depth":1082,"text":323},{"id":407,"depth":1082,"text":410},{"id":532,"depth":1076,"text":535,"children":1090},[1091,1092,1093,1094,1095,1096],{"id":543,"depth":1082,"text":546},{"id":587,"depth":1082,"text":590},{"id":636,"depth":1082,"text":639},{"id":680,"depth":1082,"text":683},{"id":724,"depth":1082,"text":727},{"id":773,"depth":1082,"text":776},{"id":817,"depth":1076,"text":820,"children":1098},[1099,1100,1101,1102],{"id":828,"depth":1082,"text":831},{"id":844,"depth":1082,"text":847},{"id":860,"depth":1082,"text":863},{"id":876,"depth":1082,"text":879},{"id":892,"depth":1076,"text":895},{"id":923,"depth":1076,"text":926},{"id":1015,"depth":1076,"text":1018},{"id":1041,"depth":1076,"text":1044},"2026-04-27T17:00:30.272Z","2026-04-28T02:36:37.773Z","2026-04-28T02:36:37.885Z","spanish",0,"April 27, 2026",[],[1115,1128,1139],{"id":1116,"documentId":1117,"slug":1118,"category":1110,"lang":3,"title":1119,"description":1120,"image":1121,"tags":1126,"timestampUnix":1127,"featured":3},6841,"gkvtuyt0v4lo06l9tiuxhcl4","ir-future-tense-spanish-conjugation-guide","How to Conjugate Ir in Spanish Future Tense (complete Guide)","Learn how to conjugate ir in the Spanish future tense with clear charts, examples, and usage tips. Master both simple future and ir a + infinitive forms.",{"alt":1122,"src":1123,"width":1124,"height":1125,"previewOnly":18},"How to conjugate ir in Spanish (future tense) - Banner","https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku-cms-assets.migaku.com\u002Fimage_content_1_8c0bd74f70\u002Fimage_content_1_8c0bd74f70.png",1376,768,[20,21,23,22],"1777474846309",{"id":1129,"documentId":1130,"slug":1131,"category":1110,"lang":3,"title":1132,"description":1133,"image":1134,"tags":1137,"timestampUnix":1138,"featured":3},6820,"letqg7igkbnm5hqdxsku0n05","ser-preterite-conjugation-spanish-guide","Ser Preterite Conjugation: Complete Spanish Guide","Master ser preterite conjugation with this complete guide. Learn all forms (fui, fue, fuimos), see real examples, and understand when to use the preterite tense.",{"alt":1135,"src":1136,"width":1124,"height":1125,"previewOnly":18},"How to conjugate ser in the Spanish preterite - Banner","https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku-cms-assets.migaku.com\u002Fimage_content_1_9e7f8922bd\u002Fimage_content_1_9e7f8922bd.png",[20,21,23,22],"1777440744566",{"id":1140,"documentId":1141,"slug":1142,"category":1110,"lang":3,"title":1143,"description":1144,"image":1145,"tags":1148,"timestampUnix":1149,"featured":3},6818,"x2vebyan3t9p2lhfh5qn3kvp","saber-verb-conjugation-spanish-guide","Saber Verb Conjugation: Complete Spanish Guide","Learn how to conjugate saber in Spanish across all tenses. Complete conjugation tables, saber vs conocer differences, and practical examples for every level.",{"alt":1146,"src":1147,"width":1124,"height":1125,"previewOnly":18},"How to conjugate saber in Spanish - Banner","https:\u002F\u002Fmigaku-cms-assets.migaku.com\u002Fimage_content_1_c8ff2e733a\u002Fimage_content_1_c8ff2e733a.png",[20,21,23,22],"1777440640198"]