Madrigals Magic Key to Spanish (160 page)

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Authors: Margarita Madrigal

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In order to change verbs into the intimate form ADD THE LETTER “S” TO THE SINGULAR THIRD MAN IN ALL TENSES (except the preterite and the command).

 
FORMAL
INTIMATE
PRESENT
usted habla
tú hablas,
you speak
IMPERFECT
usted hablaba
tú hablabas,
you used to speak
FUTURE TENSE
usted hablará
tú hablarás,
you will speak
CONDITIONAL
usted hablaría
tú hablarías,
you would speak
PRES. SUBJUNCTIVE
hable
hables
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE
hablara
hablaras

In compound tenses add the letter “s” to the auxiliary verb

 
FORMAL
INTIMATE
PRES. PERFECT
usted ha hablado,
you have spoken
tú has hablado,
you have spoken
PAST PERFECT
usted había hablado,
you had spoken
tú habías hablado,
you had spoken
PRES. PROGRESSIVE
usted está hablando,
you are speaking
tú estás hablando,
you are speaking
PAST PROGRESSIVE
usted estaba hablando,
you were speaking
tú estabas hablando,
you were speaking
FUTURE
usted va a hablar,
you are going to speak
tú vas a hablar,
you are going to speak

ER and IR verbs

 
FORMAL
INTIMATE
PRESENT
usted vende
tú vendes,
you sell
IMPERFECT
usted vendía
tú vendías,
you used to sell
FUTURE TENSE
usted venderá
tú venderás,
you will sell
CONDITIONAL
usted vendería
tú venderías,
you would sell
PRES. SUBJUNCTIVE
venda
vendas
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE
vendiera
vendieras

To form the intimate preterite of “ar” verbs remove “ar” from the infinitive and add “aste.”

EXAMPLES
:

tú hablaste, (intimate)
you talked

tú compraste, (intimate)
you bought

To form the intimate preterite of “er” and “ir” verbs remove the “er” or “ir” and add “iste.”

EXAMPLES
:

tú vendiste, (intimate)
you sold

tú escribiste, (intimate)
you wrote

To form the intimate command of “ar” verbs remove “ar” and add the letter “a.”

habla,
speak
compra,
buy

To form the intimate command of “er” and “ir” verbs remove the “er” or the “ir” and add “e.”

vende,
sell
escribe,
write

Remember that subject pronouns are very frequently dropped in Spanish. “Tú” is dropped more often than not because the ending of the verb makes it clear who the subject is.

You can either say, “Tú hablas muy bien” (
You speak very well
) or simply “Hablas muy bien.”

The intimate form has an archaic English equivalent (thou, thee, thine), but it has not been used here since it is not used in present-day speech.

The actual translation of “Tú hablas” is
“Thou speakest.”

Only one nonconformist verb is
irregular in the present tense intimate form: “usted es” becomes “tú eres.” All the rest of the nonconformist verbs follow the regular rule in the present: Add the letter “s” to the singular, third man form.

EXAMPLES
:

tú haces,
you do
; tú vienes,
you come
; tú tienes,
you have

To form the
intimate preterite of nonconformist verbs remove the letter “o” from the singular third man form of the preterite and add “iste.”

EXAMPLES
:

FORMAL
INTIMATE
usted tuvo,
you had
tú tuviste,
you had
usted estuvo,
you were
tú estuviste,
you were
usted vino,
you came
tú viniste,
you came
usted puso,
you put
tú pusiste,
you put

In “fué,” you remove the “é” and add “iste”:

usted fué,
you went
; tú fuiste,
you went

In “cayó,” “oyó,” “leyó” and all other verbs that end in “yo” remove the “yo” and add “iste” (accent the í).

EXAMPLES
:

FORMAL
INTIMATE
usted cayó,
you fell
tú caíste,
you fell
usted leyó,
you read
tú leíste,
you read
usted oyó,
you heard
tú oíste,
you heard

To form the intimate command of nonconformist verbs drop the “ga” from the formal command.

FORMAL COMMAND
INTIMATE COMMAND
venga,
come
ven,
come
salga,
go out
sal,
go out
diga,
say
di,
say
ponga,
put
pon,
put
tenga,
have
(
take
)
ten,
have
(
take
)
traiga,
bring
trae,
bring
caiga,
fall
cae,
fall

The “i” changes to “e” in the intimate form of the verbs “trae” and “cae.”

To form the negative of the intimate command add “s” to the formal command.

FORMAL COMMAND
INTIMATE NEGATIVE COMMAND
venga,
come
no vengas,
don’t come
salga,
go out
no salgas,
don’t go out
diga,
say
no digas,
don’t say
ponga,
put
no pongas,
don’t put
tenga,
have
(
take
)
no tengas,
don’t have
traiga,
bring
no traigas,
don’t bring
caiga,
fall
no caigas,
don’t fall

Four verbs do not follow the rule:

FORMAL COMMAND
INTIMATE COMMAND
INTIMATE NEGATIVE COMMAND
oiga,
hear, listen
oye,
hear, listen
no oigas,
don’t hear
haga,
do, make
haz,
do, make
no hagas,
don’t do
vaya,
go
vé,
go
no vayas,
don’t go
sea,
be
sé,
be
no seas,
don’t be

“Con usted” (
with you
) has an intimate form: “contigo” (
with thee
).

The intimate equivalent for LO, LA, LE is TE.

FORMAL
INTIMATE
lo ví,
I saw you
(masc.)
te ví,
I saw you
(
thee
)
le dí,
I gave you
te dí,
I gave you
(
thee
)
la invité,
I invited you
(fem.)
te invité,
I invited you
POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS

MI (sing.), MIS (pl.),
my

SU (sing.), SUS (pl.),
your, his, her, their, its

NUESTRO (
our
) has masculine, feminine, singular, and plural endings:

NUESTRO
NUESTROS
NUESTRA
NUESTRAS

EXAMPLES
:

mi casa,
my house

mis casas,
my houses

su casa,
your, his, her, their house

sus casas,
your, his, her, their houses

nuestras casas,
our houses

nuestro auto,
our car

nuestros autos,
our cars

MÍO (
mine
), SUYO (
yours, his, hers, theirs
) and NUESTRO (
ours
) have masculine, feminine, singular, and plural endings.

Mine
:

mío
míos
mía
mías

Yours, his, hers, theirs
:

suyo
suyos
suya
suyas

Ours
:

nuestro
nuestros
nuestra
nuestras

EXAMPLES
:

El libro es mío.
The book is mine
.

La blusa es mía.
The blouse is mine
.

Los libros son míos.
The books are mine
.

Las blusas son mías.
The blouses are mine
.

El libro es suyo.
The book is yours
.

La blusa es suya.
The blouse is yours
.

Los libros son suyos.
The books are yours
.

Las blusas son suyas.
The blouses are yours
.

Es mío.
It’s mine
(referring to a masculine thing).

Es mía.
It’s mine
(referring to a feminine thing).

El dinero es nuestro.
The money is ours
.

Ese hijo mío.
That son of mine
.

DIMINUTIVES

ITO, ITA, ITOS, ITAS are diminutive endings in Spanish.

el sombrero,
the hat
el sombrerito,
the little hat
la casa,
the house
la casita,
the little house
los sombreros,
the hats
los sombreritos,
the little hats
las mesas,
the tables
las mesitas,
the little tables

The diminutive is often used in Spanish as an expression of endearment.

EXAMPLES
:

abuelo,
grandfather

mi abuelito,
my grandfather
(an endearing term)

ojos,
eyes

ojitos,
sweet eyes, pretty eyes
(a term of endearment)

un gato,
a cat

un gatito,
a kitten, a cute little cat

una casa,
a house

una casita,
a cute little house, a charming little house

STRESSES AND
ACCENTS

RULE I: When a word ends in N, S, or a vowel it receives the stress on the next to the last syllable.

EXAMPLES
:

entran, EN–tran (stress the e)

sombreros, som–BRE–ros (stress the e)

dentista, den–TIS–ta (stress the i)

posible, po–SI–ble (stress the i)

loco, LO–co (stress the first o)

RULE II: When a word does not end in N, S, or a vowel it receives the accent on the last syllable.

EXAMPLES
:

tractor, trac–TOR (stress the o)

postal, pos–TAL (stress the a)

Any word that does not follow either Rule I or Rule II is an abnormal word and therefore must have a written accent.

EXAMPLES
:

público, pú–bli–co

dramático, dra–má–ti–co

árbol, ár–bol

azúcar, a–zú–car

conversación, con–ver–sa–ción

café, ca–fé

The letters A, E, O form syllables whether used alone or in combination with any other letter.

EXAMPLES
:

lc–o

cre–e

The letters I and U form syllables when they are not combined with any vowel.

EXAMPLES
:

popular, po–pu–lar

capital, ca–pi–tal

When I and U are combined with another vowel they do not form separate syllables.

EXAMPLES
:

ciudad, ciu–dad

oigo, oi–go

familia, fa–mi–lia

traigo, trai–go

If you are a beginner, do not read the following rules until you have mastered lesson 40.

Accents are used to distinguish two identical words that have different meanings.

EXAMPLES
:

de,
of, from
dé,
give
el,
the
él,
he
mi,
my
mí,
me
si,
if
sí,
yes

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