The Everything Spanish Grammar Book: All The Rules You Need To Master Espanol (Everything®) (24 page)

BOOK: The Everything Spanish Grammar Book: All The Rules You Need To Master Espanol (Everything®)
3.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

–AR and –ER verbs with the o > ue stem change follow the same “four out of six” rule. Take a look at the present-subjunctive conjugations of
contar
(to count, to tell) and
poder
(to be able to):

cuente
contemos
cuentes
contéis
cuente
cuenten
pueda
podamos
puedas
podáis
pueda
puedan

Other verbs that behave in the same fashion include the following:

Infinitive
Present Indicative (yo form)
Present Subjunctive (yo form)
Present Subjunctive (nosotros form)
costar
(to cost)
cuesto
cueste
costemos
doler
(to hurt)
duelo
duela
dolamos
mostrar
(to show)
muestro
muestre
mostremos
recordar
(to remember)
recuerda
recordemos
 
volar
(to fly)
vuelo
vuele
volemos
volver
(to return)
vuelvo
vuelva
volvamos

The rule for stem-changing –IR verbs is a little different. In the
nosotros
and
vosotros
forms, the stem vowel changes as follows:
e > i, o > u. Here are two examples,
mentir
(to lie) and
dormir
(to sleep):

mienta
mintamos
mientas
mintáis
mienta
mientan
duerma
durmamos
duermas
durmáis
duerma
duerman
Infinitive
Present Indicative (yo form)
Present Subjunctive (yo form)
Present Subjunctive (nosotros form)
morir
(to die)
muero
muera
muramos
preferir
(to prefer)
prefiero
prefiera
prefiramos
sentir
(to feel)
siento
sienta
sintamos

Spelling-Modification Irregularities

For some verbs, there’s a spelling modification that does not occur with the
yo
form of the present indicative, but which does occur in other forms and which is necessary in the present subjunctive. The letters involved in the spelling modification are “c,” “g,” and “z,” and they are found at the end of the stem, where their interaction with the endings results in the change.

When you’re conjugating an –AR verb in the present subjunctive, the “e” in the endings requires the following changes:

c > qu

g > gu

z > c

For example, take a look at the conjugations of
tocar
(to touch),
llegar
(to arrive), and
cruzar
(to cross):

toque
toquemos
toques
toquéis
toque
toquen
llegue
lleguemos
llegues
lleguéis
llegue
lleguen
cruce
crucemos
cruces
crucéis
cruce
crucen

Alternatively, –ER and –IR verbs might require one of the following changes, brought on by the endings that begin with “a”:

c > z

g > j

gu > g

To illustrate how this works, here are the conjugations of
conocer
(to know),
proteger
(to protect), and
seguir
(to follow):

conozca
conozcamos
conozcas
conozcáis
conozca
conozcan
proteja
protejamos
protejas
protejáis
proteja
protejan
siga
sigamos
sigas
sigáis
siga
sigan

FACT

Some verbs have both a stem change and a spelling modification change. Take the verb
empezar
(to begin): its six conjugations in the subjunctive are
empiece, empieces,
empiece, empecemos, empecéis,
and
empiecen
.

Other Irregularities

A small group of verbs have an irregular stem that you’ll need to memorize; these verbs retain the regular present-subjunctive endings.

Infinitive
present-subjunctive stem
yo form
haber
(to have)
hay–
haya
ir
(to go)
vay–
vaya
saber
(to know)
sep–
sepa
ser
(to be)
se–
sea

Three other verbs—
dar
(to give),
estar
(to be), and
oler
(to smell)—have irregular present subjunctive forms. Their conjugations are:


demos
des
deis

den
esté
estemos
estés
estéis
esté
estén
huela
olamos
huelas
oláis
huela
huelan

Indicative or Subjunctive?

The rule of thumb when choosing between indicative and subjunctive is to ask yourself whether the verb is used to describe a state or action that is concrete (whether it takes place in the past, present, or future doesn’t make any difference here) or whether it is potential and/or subjective. For example, compare the two statements:

Yo sé que Alana está bien.

I know that Alana is well.

Yo espero que Alana esté bien.

I hope that Alana is well.

In the first example, the statement refers to something that is known—that Alana is well. The second statement isn’t describing something that’s definite. It is merely expressing hope that Alana is well—whether she is in fact well isn’t the point here. In Spanish, this kind of uncertainty requires the use of the subjunctive.

ALERT

Sometimes the only difference between the indicative and subjunctive is a simple “no.”
Es cierto que
(it’s certain that) should be followed by a phrase in the indicative mood;
no es
cierto que
(it’s not certain that) is a phrase that introduces a clause in the subjunctive mood.

Two Verbs Connected with
Que

Present subjunctive is frequently used within a
que
(that) clause, as in the previous example. Whether or not the
que
clause should have a subjunctive-mood verb depends on the verb in the main clause. Here’s another example:

Ella duda que tú entiendas la lección.

She doubts you understand the lesson.

Because the sentence’s main action is
dudar
(to doubt), the verb
entender
(to understand) inside the
que
clause is in the subjunctive mood. Several different groups of verbs generally take on a subjunctive
que
clause:

Doubt or Uncertainty

dudar
to doubt
no estar seguro
not to be sure
imaginarse
to expect

Hope or Necessity

esperar
to hope, to expect
necesitar
to need
querer
to want
preferir
to prefer

Emotional State

alegrar
to make happy
enojar
to make angry
gustar
to like
sentir
to feel
sorprender
to surprise

Telling or Asking

 
aconsejar
to advise
decir
to say
exigir
to demand
insistir
to insist
pedir
to ask
prohibir
to forbid
rogar
to beg

Other books

A Man to Trust by Carrie Turansky
Second Thyme Around by Katie Fforde
The Mad Bomber of New York by Michael M. Greenburg
Santa's Naughty List by Carter, Mina