Spanish Verb Conjugation

Definition:

Spanish verb conjugation is the systematic morphological inflection of Spanish verbs to encode person (1st, 2nd, 3rd), number (singular, plural), tense (present, preterite, imperfect, future, conditional), aspect (perfective/imperfective), and mood (indicative, subjunctive, imperative). Spanish is a pro-drop language — subject pronouns are regularly omitted because agreement morphology encodes person/number on the verb itself. The language’s three verb classes (-ar, -er, -ir) have regular paradigms, but numerous stem-changing verbs (e?ie, o?ue, e?i) and a large set of irregular verbs add substantial morphological complexity that constitutes a major component of Spanish grammar acquisition.


The Three Conjugation Classes

ClassInfinitive endingExampleEnglish
First-arhablarto speak
Second-ercomerto eat
Third-irvivirto live

Present Indicative Paradigm (Regular)

Person-ar (hablar)-er (comer)-ir (vivir)
yohablocomovivo
hablascomesvives
él/ella/Ud.hablacomevive
nosotroshablamoscomemosvivimos
vosotroshabláiscoméisvivís
ellos/Uds.hablancomenviven

Stem-Changing Verbs

Three productive alternation types occur in stem vowels in present tense (not in 1pl/2pl):

PatternExampleyo-formnosotros-form
e ? iequerer (to want)quieroqueremos
o ? uepoder (to be able)puedopodemos
e ? ipedir (to ask for)pidopedimos

The Irregular yo Pattern

Many Spanish verbs have a regular full paradigm except for a unique yo-form: salir ? salgo, tener ? tengo, poner ? pongo, venir ? vengo, hacer ? hago, conocer ? conozco. This list is high-frequency and requires memorization.

Preterite Irregulars

Spanish has a group of “go-form” preterite irregulars with distinct stems and uniform endings:

ser/ir ? fui, fue…; tener ? tuve; poder ? pude; querer ? quise; saber ? supe; venir ? vine; hacer ? hice

Synthetic vs. Periphrastic Future

Spanish has a synthetic future (hablaré — I will speak) built with infinitive + haber suffixes, and a periphrastic future (voy a hablar — I’m going to speak) with ir a + infinitive. The periphrastic future is dominant in informal spoken registers.


History

Spanish verb conjugation descends from Latin’s highly synthetic verbal morphology. Latin’s six tenses were reorganized in Spanish, with the Latin synthetic perfect becoming the Spanish preterite and the Latin imperfect surviving. The synthetic future was lost and then re-derived from an auxiliary (habere) construction (amar habeo ? amaré).

Common Misconceptions

  • “Pro-drop means subjects are never mentioned” — Pronoun subjects are used for emphasis, contrast, and disambiguation in Spanish
  • “The subjunctive is dying in Spanish” — The subjunctive is fully productive and conventionally required in many constructions (see Spanish Subjunctive)

Criticisms

  • Traditional L2 Spanish instruction overemphasizes paradigm drilling at the expense of communicative use; rote conjugation memorization has limited transfer to spontaneous production

Social Media Sentiment

“Spanish verb conjugation” is one of the most searched Spanish grammar topics. The irregular verb list and stem-changing verb patterns generate frequent “this is why Spanish is confusing” posts, though many learners note that the synthetic endings carry heavy information content once acquired. Last updated: 2026-04

Practical Application

  • Group stem-changing verbs by pattern in instruction to reduce memorization load
  • Prioritize high-frequency irregular yo-forms (salir, venir, tener, hacer) early

Related Terms

See Also

Research

  • Montrul, S. (2004). The Acquisition of Spanish. John Benjamins. — Covers verbal morphology acquisition in L2 and heritage Spanish.
  • Penny, R. (2002). A History of the Spanish Language (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. — Historical development of Spanish verbal morphology from Latin.
  • Pountain, C. J. (2003). Exploring the Spanish Language. Oxford University Press. — Accessible synchronic and diachronic treatment of Spanish verbal system.