
All the verbs in each group follow the same rules.Ĭoncluir: To conclude Let’s look more closely at one irregular verb from each groupĪll the verbs in this group changed an E to an IE (for all persons except Nosotros/as and Vosotros/as) and are conjugated as follows: Yo You will see that these irregular verbs are organised into 4 groups. The following Spanish verbs do not follow the same conjugation rules as regular verbs. In this lesson we will take a look at some other commonly used Irregular Spanish Verbs in Present Tense and give you some tips to help remember their conjugations. The most fundamental Spanish verbs, Ser (To be) and Estar (To be), are both irregular, as are Querer (To Want) and Tener (To Have). We have already seen some Irregular verbs in this course and hopefully you are already familiar with them. In this lesson we will look specifically at Irregular Spanish Verbs in Present Tense. There are Irregular verbs in every tense (present, past, future, etc). With Irregular verbs you have to remember each specific conjugation. Irregular verbs do not follow the same one-size-fits-all, easy-to-learn patterns as the Regular verbs. This is great, but unfortunately there are also Irregular Spanish Verbs in Present Tense. In lesson twenty of this course we learned that the majority of Spanish verbs in Present Tense are Regular Verbs and that Regular signifies that such verbs follow the same pattern and are conjugated (endings changed) in the same way.


This is the thirty-third lesson in our beginner level Spanish course and we will look at Irregular Spanish Verbs in Present Tense.
