Spanish irregular verbs
Spanish verbs are a complex area of Spanish grammar, with many combinations of tenses, aspects and moods. Although conjugation rules are relatively straightforward, a large number of verbs are irregular. Among these, some fall into more-or-less defined deviant patterns, whereas others are uniquely irregular. This article summarizes the common irregular patterns.
As in all Romance languages, many irregularities in Spanish verbs can be retraced to Latin grammar.
Orthographic changes
Due to the rules of Spanish orthography, some predictable changes are needed to keep the same consonant sound before a or o and e or i, but these are not usually considered irregularities. The following examples use the first person plural of the present subjunctive:- : c—''qu: ' > ', ' > '.
- : z''—c: ' > ', ' > '.
- : g—''j: ' > '. But in verbs ending in -jar, the j'' is kept before e: ' > '.
- : g—''gu: ' > ', ' > '.
- : gu—gü: ' > '.
- Stress mark on stressed i after a, e or o: ' > ', ' > ', ' > ' ; this does not apply to any G-verbs such as ' and its related forms.
- Stress mark not used in monosyllabic forms: ' > ', ' ; ' > ', '. However, before 2010, the forms ' and ', ' and ', ' and ', and ' and ' could also be written with the accent mark by writers who pronounce these forms as bisyllabic. But this option was not available for '.
- Unstressed i is written y between non-silent vowels: ' > ', ' ; ' > ', '. This does not apply to verbs ending in -quir.
- Unstressed i is dropped between ll or ñ and a vowel: ' > ', ' > '.
Stem-vowel changes
There are two kinds of changes that can affect stem vowels of some Spanish verbs: diphthongization and vowel raising. Both changes affect -e- or -o- in the last syllable of a verb stem. Diphthongization changes -e- to -ie-, and -o- to -ue-. Vowel raising changes the mid vowels -e- and -o- to the corresponding high vowels: -i- and -u- respectively. Some verbs, in their various forms, can exhibit both kinds of changes .Diphthongization
The identities of verbs that diphthongize -e- to -ie- and -o- to -ue- are not marked and must be learned individually. In a diphthongizing verb, the change occurs when the stem syllable is stressed, which in effect happens only in the singular persons and third-person plural of the present tense and in the imperative. In the other forms, including the infinitive, are stressed on their endings, not their stems. Exceptionally, the -u- of and the -i- of verbs derived from querer like also are subject to diphthongization.Word-initially, *ie- is written ye- and *ue- is written hue- . Also, the -ue- diphthong is written -üe- after g, with the diaeresis to indicate that the letter is not silent .
The following table shows contrasting forms for both types dipthongization, and the irregular -quirir and jugar:
- In Central America pensés, contés, etc. are used in the subjunctive present and imperative, but the Royal Spanish Academy prescribes,, etc., as in Rioplatense Spanish.
Many verbs with -e- or -o- in the root do not alternate. Common non-diphthongizing verbs include ', ', ', ', '², ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', '¹, ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', among others. Less frequent verbs of this kind are often a source of mistakes for children learning to speak, and also for some adults:
- ' → yo *rebueso, él/ella *rebuesa... instead of yo rebo'''so, él rebosa...
Vowel raising
Vowel raising appears only in -ir verbs, and in this group it affects,, and nearly all verbs which have -e- as their last stem vowel. Exceptions to that last rule include and its derivatives, which are only diphthongizing.Affected forms
The forms that exhibit the change can be described negatively as those in which the stem vowel is not diphthongized and the ending does not contain stressed i or the -ir- sequence. In other words, vowel raising affects the forms whose endings do not contain an i which is not part of a diphthong, taking into account that diphthongizing overrides vowel raising.For diphthongizing verbs, the vowel-raising forms are:
- the first-person and second-person plural of the present subjunctive ;
- the present active participle or gerund ;
- the third-person indicative past perfect ;
- all forms of the subjunctive imperfect past and of the future subjunctive.
- the singulars and third person plural of the present indicative ;
- the remaining forms of the present subjunctive ;
- the tú form of the imperative, but not the vos nor vosotros forms.
- the first-person and second-person plural of the indicative present, because these forms have stressed i in their endings.
- the infinitive, past participle, indicative imperfect past and the vos and vosotros forms of the imperative, for the same reason.
- the future and conditional, whose endings contain the -ir- sequence and derive from the infinitive.
Affected verbs
Vowel-raising but not diphthongizing verbs include:- those ending in -edir, -egir, and -etir
- * those ending in -eír. Double i that would result is simplified. The stressed i in contact with a/e/o must take an acute accent ; monosyllabic forms of the indicative perfect past tense do not have it.
- * those ending in -eñir. As usual, the unstressed i'' between ñ and a vowel is dropped.' and derived verbs, in forms that do not have overriding irregularities.
- '. Usually diphthongizing, there are raised forms that are valid but rare.
- and derived verbs, which goes from -a- to -i- in forms that do not have overriding irregularities. The -facer derivatives take forms identical to hacer but with an initial f- instead of an initial h-.'. The affected forms are equal to those derived from the more usual infinitive ', which is regular except in the past participle '.
- ' and derived verbs
Diphthongizing and vowel-raising verbs include:
- those ending in -entir and -ertir.
- * those ending in -erir, except '.
- ', ', and ' and derived verbs, in the forms that do not undergo overriding irregularities.
Diphthong loss
Diphthongs in the infinitive may be preserved throughout the conjugation or broken in the forms which are stressed on the stem, depending on whether the i or u in contact with a/e/o take the stress or not. The stressed vowel is marked bold in the examples: ' > ca'mbio, but ' > enví'o. The Real Academia Española does not consider either behaviour as irregular, but illustrates each with six "regular" models, one for each possible diphthong in the infinitive: ', ', ', ', ' and ' for diphthong-keeping verbs and ', ', ', ', ' and ' for diphthong-breaking ones. The presence of a silent h does not break a diphthong, so a written accent is needed anyway in rehúso.All verbs ending in -guar are diphthong-keeping, as well as ', ', ' and '. Two diphthongs are kept in ' > desa'hucio, which thus follows both the anunciar and causar models.
Diphthong-breaking verbs include ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', ', '. The verbs ', ', ', ' and ' are also diphthong-breaking, but when the stress falls on the endings the resulting forms are generally considered as monosyllables and thus written without accent: crie, fie, guiais, lieis.... In spite of that, the regular accentuation rules can also be used if they are pronounced as bisyllabic: crié, guiáis....
For the verbs ' and ' both options are valid: adecuo or adecúo.
The ui diphthong in ' is kept throughout the conjugation despite the fact of the i'' getting the stress in forms such as cuido.
Other common irregular patterns
Endings starting with ''o/a'' in ''er/ir'' verbs
In er and ir verbs, the first person singular of the present indicative and the whole present subjunctive are the only forms whose endings start with o/a instead of e/i. These two different phonetic environments made Latin forms evolve differently in many verbs, leading to irregularities. Whenever the first person singular of the present indicative has an irregularity other than diphthongizing, but still ends in -o, the whole present subjunctive shares that same irregularity. For example:': quepo, quepa...- '
- ': voy, vaya...
- ': he, haya
- ': sé, sepa...
- : soy, sea...
''G''-verbs
Before o and a, the so-called g-verbs add a medial -g- after l and n, add -ig- when the root ends in a vowel, or substitute -c- for -g-. This change overrides diphthongization but combines with vowel-raising. Many of these verbs are also irregular in other ways. For example:': yo asg'o'', tú ases... stem: as-': yo caigo, tú caes... stem: ca-- '
''Zc''-verbs
This group of verbs—which originated in the Latin inchoative verbs but now includes other verbs as well—substitute -zc- for stem-final -c- before o and a. The group includes nearly all verbs ending in -acer, -ecer, -ocer, and -ucir. For example:': yo nazco, tú naces...- '
Irregular forms in the future, conditional and imperative
Some -er and -ir verbs also change their stem in the future and conditional. This involves syncope:- Just dropping the infinitive e: → cabré, ' → habré, ' → podré, ' → querré, ' → sabré
- Dropping the infinitive e/i and padding the resulting *-lr-/*-nr- with an epenthetic -d-: ' → pondré, ' → saldré, → tendré, ' → valdré, ' → vendré.
- Dropping the infinitive -ce- or -ec-: ' → diré, ' → haré
- * ', ', ' may share this irregularity or, more commonly, use the regular forms. For ' and ' only the regular forms are used.
Anomalous stems in the preterite and derived tenses
Some verbs have a somewhat different stem in the preterite. These stems are very old and often are found in Latin as well. The same irregular stem is also found in the imperfect subjunctive and the future subjunctive. These stems are anomalous also because:- They are stressed in the first and third persons singular, ending in unstressed -e and -o respectively.
- The rest of the endings are the usual for -er/-ir verbs, even for the -ar verbs ' and '.
- In the verbs with -je preterite unstressed i is dropped between the j and a vowel: ellos trajeron, yo trajera... This does not happen with regular or vowel-raising -ger/-jer/-gir/-jir verbs.
- '
Irregular past participles
A number of verbs have irregular past participles, sometimes called "strong" because the change is in the root, rather than an ending. This includes verbs which are irregular in many other ways, like ' and ', but for other verbs this is their only irregularity, while some very irregular verbs have regular past participles. Examples:' → '' → '' → '' → '/ ' → '; ' → ' ' → '' → '' → '' → '' → ' ' → '' → 'Most of these verbs have derivatives with the same irregularity. For example, alongside volver → vuelto and poner → puesto, there are ' → ' and ' → '; alongside ' → ' there is ' → '. Solver is obsolete, but its derivatives ' and ' are in common use. Likewise with and its derivatives comprimir,,,,,, and. The alternative form of escrito, ', is used in Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay; likewise with derivates of escribir, such as '.
There are verbs that have both a regular and an irregular past participle. Both forms may be used when conjugating the compound tenses and the passive voice with the auxiliary verbs ' and ', but the irregular form is generally the only one used as an adjective:
- → or ' → ' or '; but "french fries".
- ' → ' or '
- → or ' → ' or ', but una despensa bien provista is far more usual than una despensa bien proveída.
Wholly irregular verbs
The verbs ' "to go" and ' "to be " both exhibit irregularities in the present, imperfect and preterite forms. Together with ' "to see", they are the only three verbs with irregular indicative imperfect past tenses. These verbs are highly irregular based on being single-syllable stems, and suppleting several tenses. Similarly, ' "to give" and "to be " also come from verbs with one syllable in the stem but they do not supplete any tenses. A table of their conjugations is shown below:Note that whenever the stem of the indicative perfect past tense is irregular, the subjunctive past tense and the obsolescent subjunctive future tense share the same irregularity but with different infixes. The subjunctive past -ra forms are used in the table above, as the -se forms are less predominant. See the main Spanish verbs article on the Spanish subjunctive past tense. Some forms of dar and estar take an accent when marking stress would be redundant to distinguish them from unrelated words; such as dé contrasting with the prepositon de. In New Mexican Spanish, soy may be replace by seigo.