These are the most common irregular verb forms in the Present Subjunctive. The stems are derived from the present tense first person “yo” form.
caber (to fit) - quepa, quepas, quepa, quepamos, quepáis, quepan
caer (to fall) - caiga, caigas, caiga, caigamos, caigáis, caigan
decir (to say) - diga, digas, diga, digamos, digáis, digan
hacer (to make, to do) - haga, hagas, haga, hagamos, hagáis, hagan
ir (to go) - vaya, vayas, vaya, vayamos, vayáis, vayan
oír (to hear) - oiga, oigas, oiga, oigamos, oigáis, oigan
poner (to put) - ponga, pongas, ponga, pongamos, pongáis, pongan
salir (to go out) - salga, salgas, salga, salgamos, salgáis, salgan
tener (to have) - tenga, tengas, tenga, tengamos, tengáis, tengan
traer (to bring) - traiga, traigas, traiga, traigamos, traigáis, traigan
valer (to be worth) - valga, valgas, valga, valgamos, valgáis, valgan
venir (to come) - venga, vengas, venga, vengamos, vengáis, vengan
ver (to see) - veo vea, veas, vea, veamos, veáis, vean
See you next time!











2 Comments
WELL THIS ISN’T MUCH OF A COMMENT BUT I WAS HOPING TO GET SOME SENTENCES WITH THE SUBJUNTIVE FORMS
There are several sentences with examples in the post “The subjunctive I”, from last month. You can also find plenty of examples in the post “Grammar tip: la forma reduplicativa”. You can use the search bar from the top right hand corner (if you’re accessing the blog from its original website) to look for specific content in our blog archive.
In the meantime, I will start by sending you an example in this comment. Other users are free to follow:
No es necesario que traigas un regalo. —- You don’t need to bring a present.