Every verb in Spanish ends in one of three ways: -ar, -er,
and –ir. Here are some examples.
-AR -ER -IR
Gustar = to please Comer
= to eat Dormir
= to sleep
Ayudar = to help Beber
= to drink Corregir =
to correct
Pensar = to think Poder
= to be able to Decir = to
say/to tell
Each of these endings conjugate in a certain way. In English conjugating is usually pretty
easy. I eat, she eats, they eat, you
eat, etc. In Spanish there’s a little
more to it, but once you get down the pattern you can conjugate almost any verb
(except the irregulars that we’ll discuss in a second).
Get to know this conjugating tree:
I We
Yo Nosotros You (familiar, You
(familiar,
Tú Vosotros singular)
plural)
Usted, Ustedes, You,
(formal,
You (formal,
Él, Ellos singular) plural)
Él, Ellos singular) plural)
Ella Ellas He Them (masculine)
She Them (feminine)
These are the subject pronouns of Spanish and English (by
the way, there are object pronouns as well, but we’ll go over that in a later
post). Yo=I, nostotros=we, ella=she,
él=he, and then we have some confusing things with you. In Spanish, and many other Latin-based
languages, you can be familiar or formal, and singular or plural.
When you’re talking to one person you know very well or
someone who is younger than you, use the familiar, singular form of you, which
is tú. This is appropriate for family
members, friends, peers you have gotten to know, and children. If you’re speaking to a group of these
familiar people, use vosotros. It’s the
Spanish equivalent of ya’ll, really.
However, vosotros is almost exclusively used only in Spain, and
Latin-American countries use ustedes instead.
When you’re talking to one person you don’t know well or who
is older than you, use the formal, singular form of you, which is usted. This is appropriate for strangers, peers you
haven’t gotten to know yet, people you want to show respect to, and elderly
people who aren’t family (note that every family is different, and some
families only talk to each other in tú, but others may use usted to speak to
older members of the family. It’s just a
matter of preference). If you’re
speaking to a group of unfamiliar people, use ustedes. Also, as discussed above, in Latin-American
countries ustedes is also used to talk to many people even if they are
familiar. So, if you were talking with a
group of children you would use ustedes, just like you would with a group of older
people.
Now, back to the tree.
This tree makes a pattern that you’ll use again and again in every
tense. In the present tense, verbs that
end in -AR, -ER, and –IR will conjugate and end like this:
-AR -ER -IR
-o -amos -o -emos -o -imos
-as -áis -es -éis -es -ís
-a
-an -e -en -e -en
I’m betting you could use some examples of how what on earth
I’m talking about. Let’s look at some –AR
endings first.
Echar (to
throw) trabajar
(to work) aceptar
(to accept)
echo
echamos trabajo
trabajamos acepto aceptamos
echas echáis trabajas trabajáis aceptas aceptáis
echa echan trabaja trabajas acepta aceptan
So, when you conjugate a verb that ends in –AR in Spanish,
you drop the –ar and add the appropriate ending. I throw = echo, we throw = echamos, all of
you (formal) throw = ustedes echan. And
the nice thing in Spanish is that we often don’t have to explicitly say the
pronoun. If I say, “Yo trabajo,” I could
just as well take off the yo and just say, “Trabajo,” because you know by the
way I conjugate the verb that I’m talking about myself. If I say, “Acepta,” it can be more confusing
because in that form it could mean, “She accepts,” “He accepts,” or “You
(formal) accept.” In cases like that
where we aren’t sure who the subject is we might use the pronoun: “Ella acepta,
él acepta, usted acepta.” However, if
you can infer who the pronoun is based on context you won’t even have to
specify if it’s she, he, or you (formal).
Now, how about some –ER verbs!
Creer (to believe) beber (to
drink) comer
(to eat)
Creo creemos bebo bebemos como comemos
Crees creéis bebes
bebéis comes coméis
Cree creen bebe
beben come comen
It’s the same idea here.
To conjugate a verb that ends in –ER, drop the –er and add the
appropriate ending. You (familiar)
believe = crees, we drink = bebemos, he eats = él come. Cool?
Next up, -IR verbs.
Decidir (to decide) cubrir (to cover) vivir (to live)
Decido decidimos cubro cubrimos vivo
vivimos
Decides decidís cubres cubrís vives
vivís
Decide deciden cubre
cubren vive
viven
Again, drop the –ir and add the appropriate ending. I decide = decido, ya’ll cover = cubrís, they
live = viven. Notice that verbs that end
in –ER and –IR conjugate in a very similar way.
–IR verbs conjugate just like –ER verbs except when conjugating for
nosotros (we) and vosotros (familiar, plural you). That’s actually going to be important with
other tenses we learn.
So, now you know how to conjugate every verb in Spanish,
right? Well, not quite. It turns out there are some exceptions to the
rules. We call them irregular
verbs. English has lots of
irregularities, and you know how to speak that, so you shouldn’t complain.
In English, we have this verb “to be.” We conjugate it like this: I am, you are, he
is. None of those sound anything like
the root “be.” That would be an
irregular verb. Spanish has some irregulars
that are just a little off, irregulars that are stem changers, and irregulars
that are so off you wouldn’t even think they came from the same root. Unfortunately there aren’t any rules to tell
if a verb will be irregular or not. You
really just have to memorize them. Here
are a few examples.
Ir (to go) ser (to be) estar (to be) seguir (to follow)
Voy vamos soy somos
estoy estamos sigo
seguimos
Vas vais eres sois
estás estáis
sigues segís
Va van es son
está están sigue siguen
Tener (to have) sentir (to feel/regret) dormir (to sleep) hacer (to do/make)
Tengo tenemos siento sentimos duermo dormimos
hago hacemos
Tienes tenéis sientes sentís duermes dormís haces hacéis
Tiene tienen siente sienten duerme duermen hace hacen
Elegir (to
choose) querer (to
want) decir (to say, to tell) dar
(to give)
Elijo elegimos quieros queremos digo
decimos doy
damos
Eliges elegís quieres queréis dices
decís das
dáis
Elige eligen quiere
quieren dice
dicen da dan
While there isn’t really a good way to predict whether or
not a verb will be irregular, there are some patterns. Next time we’ll talk about stem changers.
Homework for this week: the following verbs are
regular. Draw up a verb tree for each.
- Asistir (to attend)
- Gritar (to shout)
- Expresar (to express)
- Insistir (to insist)
- Hablar (to speak)
- Necesitar (to need)
- Leer (to read)
- Extrañar (to miss)
- Sacar (to take out)
- Responder (to respond)