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13 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
present perfect indicitive (endings) (comer)
he comido
has comido
ha comido
hemos comido
han comido
subjunctive (endings) (hablar)
opposite endings

hable
hables
hable
hablemos
hablen
past participle (endings)
drop ending

ar- add ado
er,ir- add ido
future (endings) (hablar)
hablaré
hablarás
hablará
hablaremos
hablaréis
hablarán
future (irregular verbs and endings)
caber
yo cabré poner
yo pondré decir
yo diré
haber
yo habré salir
yo saldré hacer
yo haré
poder
yo podré tener
yo tendré
querer
yo querré valer
yo valdré
saber
yo sabré venir
yo vendré
conditional (endings) (hablar)
hablaría
hablarías
hablaría
hablaríamos
hablaríais
hablarían
past subjuncitve (imperfecto de subjuntivo) (endings)
Take the third person plural form of the preterit (e.g., hablaron), then drop the -on from the end, which gives you the stem (hablar-) for the imperfect subjunctive. The endings are the same for all verbs: -a, -as, -a, -amos, -ais, -an.
present perfect indicitive (when to use)
The present perfect tense is a perfect tense used to express action that has been completed with respect to the present. (It is considered a present tense, not a past tense, since the resulting state is in the present.) "I have finished" is an example of the present perfect
subjunctive (when to use)
used to discuss potential or hypothetical events
Past participle (when to use)
Past participles are used to describe the nature or states of things,
future (when to use)
The future tense is used to tell what "will" happen, or what "shall" happen.
conditional (when to use)
used to express probability, possibility, wonder or conjecture, and is usually translated as would, could, must have or probably.
past subjunctive (imperfecto de subjuntivo)
The imperfect subjunctive is used in the same type of situations in which the present subjunctive is used, except that the governing verb is typically in a past tense