Irregular Verbs in Spanish Imperfect Subjunctive

Ready to tackle a challenging yet rewarding aspect of Spanish grammar? Dive into the world of irregular verbs in the Imperfect Subjunctive, a tense that expresses hypothetical situations, desires, and emotions about past events. While these verbs don’t follow the standard conjugation pattern, understanding their relationship to the irregular preterite forms can make them easier to grasp.

Unveiling the Formation Pattern

For many irregular verbs, the Imperfect Subjunctive stems from their unique preterite forms:

  1. Irregular Preterite (Ellos/Ellas): Begin with the irregular third-person plural form of the preterite tense.
  2. Remove “-ron”: Discard the “-ron” ending, leaving you with the stem.
  3. Add the Endings: Attach the imperfect subjunctive endings (-ra/-se, -ras/-ses, etc.) to the stem.

Conquering Common Irregular Verbs

Let’s explore some frequently encountered irregular verbs in the Imperfect Subjunctive:

VerbPreterite (Ellos/Ellas)Imperfect Subjunctive Stem
Ser/Ir (to be/to go)fueronfue-
Estar (to be)estuvieronestuvie-
Hacer (to do/make)hicieronhicie-
Tener (to have)tuvierontuvie-

For each of these verbs, you can then add the imperfect subjunctive endings (-ra/-se, -ras/-ses, -ra/-se, -ramos/-semos, -rais/-seis, -ran/-sen) to the stem to form the complete conjugations.

Key Takeaways

  • Connection to Preterite: Recognizing the link between irregular preterite and imperfect subjunctive forms can aid memorization.
  • Compound Verbs: These irregularities often extend to compound verbs formed from these base verbs (e.g., contener from tener).
  • Interchangeable Endings: Both -ra and -se endings are valid and can be used interchangeably in modern Spanish.

By familiarizing yourself with these irregular verbs and their unique patterns, you’ll be well on your way to mastering the Imperfect Subjunctive and expressing complex ideas about past events with confidence.

Synonyms:

  • English: Irregular Verbs in Past Subjunctive, Subjunctive II, Imperfect Subjunctive Mood
  • Spanish: Verbos Irregulares en Pretérito Imperfecto De Subjuntivo, Subjuntivo Imperfecto, Subjuntivo Pasado

Related topics:

You are here:

Finally, Spanish teachers worth your time!

Experience the LingoToGo difference for yourself with a free week of unlimited lessons.

Expert teachers, raving students, guaranteed fun.

No credit card required. No obligation.

Free trial only available in the Americas and Europe. If you are in another region, you can sign up for one week of unlimited Spanish lessons for one dollar. Here’s the link to sign up for $1.