Spanish/Verbs/bailar
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Look up bailar#Spanish in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
A quick note about verbs[edit source]
- How we regularly talk is in the indicative mood. It is used to state something seen as a fact.
- The subjunctive is a mood used to express desires, doubts, emotions and the unknown. This is NOT a tense! More info about the Subjunctive can be found here.
- The imperative mood is just commands (: It is used to tell someone what to do. For this reason, there is no yo form in the imperative!
- If you don't know which mood to use, just use indicative!
Definition[edit source]
- to dance -
Conjugations[edit source]
Present Tense (indicative)[edit source]
Yo bailo- I dance Tú bailas- You dance Él, ella, usted baile- He, she, you (polite) dances Nosotros bailamos- We dance Ellos, ellas, ustedes bailan- They dance -
Preterite Tense (indicative)[edit source]
Yo bailé- I danced Tú bailaste- You danced Él, ella, usted bailó- He, she, you (polite) danced Nosotros bailamos- We dances Ellos, ellas, ustedes bailaron- They danced -
Imperfect Tense (indicative)[edit source]
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Conditional Tense (indicative)[edit source]
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Future Tense (indicative)[edit source]
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Present Subjunctive[edit source]
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Past Subjunctive (also called imperfect subjunctive)[edit source]
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Affirmative Imperative (positive commands)[edit source]
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Negative Imperative (negative commands)[edit source]
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Special Uses[edit source]
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Idiomatic Expressions[edit source]
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