The subjunctive is not used very often in English, but it is very common and important in Spanish. Some command forms are actually the subjunctive, so the formation of the present subjunctive should not be too difficult. Start with the first person singular yo conjugation in the present indicative tense, remove the final -o and add these endings:
Present Subjunctive
-ar verbs | -er and -ir | ||
-e -es -e | -emos -éis -en | -a -as -a | -amos -áis -an |
(Notice that -ar verbs use -e and -er/-ir verbs use -a)
Usually when there is an irregular spelling change in the present indicative of a verb, that form will be used for the stem of all of the subjunctive forms. (Review #29 from Spanish I) Verbs than end in -erir, -ertir, or -entir use two different irregular spellings in the present subjunctive:mentir in present subjunctive | |
mienta mientas mienta | mintamos mintáis mientan |
The past subjunctive is formed from the third person plural of the preterite. Remove the -on ending, leaving you with -ar and -ier, and add these new endings:
Past (Imperfect) Subjunctive
all verbs | |
-a -as -a | -amos -ais -an |
An accent is added to the stem vowel as well in the first person plural form. Instead of hablaramos, it is habláramos; instead of comieramos, it is comiéramos, etc. Note that there is another way to form the past subjunctive (a different set of endings), but the endings given are used more often. You must always the past subjunctive after como si. Es como si fuera mi padre. It's as if he were my father.
Present perfect subjunctive | Past perfect subjunctive | |||||
haya hayas haya | hayamos hayáis hayan | + past participle | hubiera hubieras hubiera | hubiéramos hubierais hubieran | + past participle |
No comments:
Post a Comment