Grammar Lessons Index
- The Spanish Alphabet
- The Spanish Family
- Spanish Numbers
- Spanish Nouns
- Days & Months
- Pronouns yo and tú
- What? or Which? - Qué vs. Cuál
- Use of Ser to Indicate Origin & Identity
- Definite Article
- Indefinite Article
- Nouns - Gender
- Nouns - Number
- Verb Estar
- Verb Ser
- Use of Muy & Mucho
- Article Contractions
- Saying Hello in Spanish
- Making Introductions
- Good manners
- Saying Goodbye in Spanish
- Pronouns él, ella and usted
- Use of the "personal a"
- Colors - Los Colores
- The Infinitive
- Personal Pronouns
- Other Personal Pronouns
- Use of cuánto, mucho and poco with nouns
- Telling Time
- Spanish Adjectives
- Numeral and Indefinite Adjectives
- Interrogative Pronouns and Adjectives
- Talking about Food
- Describing the house
- Talking about transportation
- Talking about yourself
- Asking Directions
- Verb Tener
- tener que
- acabar de
- deber, debería
- Verb necesitar
- Verb querer
- Discussing Clothing
- Verb vestirse
-
Present Indicative - Present Tense
- Present Indicative
- Present Tense - Regular Verbs
- Present Tense - Regular -ar Verbs
- Present Tense - Regular -er Verbs
- Present Tense - Regular -ir Verbs
- Present Indicative - Irregular Verbs
- Irregular Verbs - (ir) changes to (go)
- Irregular Spanish Verbs - ser, estar
- Irregular Spanish Verb Ir
- Irregular Verbs - (c) changes to (zc)
- Irregular Verbs - (g) changes to (j)
- Irregular Spanish Verbs - (gu) changes to (g)
- Accented Endings
- Irregular Spanish Verb - ver
- Irregular Spanish Verb - oir
- Irregular Spanish Verb - dar
- Irregular Spanish Verb - saber
- Present Indicative - Stem-Changing Verbs
- Stem-Changing Verbs - (o) changes to (ue)
- Stem-Changing Verbs - (e) changes to (ie)
- Stem changing verbs - e changes to i
- Stem-Changing Verbs - (u) changes to (ue)
- The Human Body
- Adjective Placement
- Spanish Opposites
- Cognates and false cognates
- Negation
- Verb Gustar
- Verb Doler
- Verb Sentirse
- Possessive Adjectives
- Using (ir) to express the future
- Reflexive Pronouns
- Pronominal Verbs
- Reflexive Verbs
- Quasireflexive Verbs
- Quasireflexive Passive Verbs
- Reciprocal Verbs
- Reflexive/pronominal Verbs
- Verb Haber - expressing existence
- Verb Haber - indicate obligation
- Making a Polite Request
- Indirect Object
- Indirect Object Pronouns
- Comparisons: más... que, menos... que, tan... como
- Demonstrative Adjectives
- Demonstrative Pronouns
- Present Progressive
- Direct Object
- Direct Object Pronouns
- Affirmative tú commands
- Negative tú commands
- Irregular tú commands
- Ambos, todos, cada
-
Preterite Indicative - Preterite Tense
- Preterite Tense
- Preterite Tense - Regular Verbs
- Preterite Tense - Regular -ar Verbs
- Preterite Tense - Regular -er Verbs
- Preterite Tense - Regular -ir Verbs
- Preterite Tense - Irregular Verbs
- Irregular Verb ser
- Irregular Verbs ir
- Irregular Verbs ver & dar
- Irregular - Accented endings
- Irregular - j-stem verbs
- Irregular - i-stem verbs
- Irregular - u-stem verbs
- (e) changes to (i)
- Preterite - poder
- Preterite - poner
- Preterite - tener
- Preterite - salir
- Preterite - pedir
- The pronouns quién and quiénes
- The Infinitive
- Verbs Similar to Gustar
- Present - conocer
- Ordinal Numbers and Fractions
- Direct Object Pronouns
- Spanish Adverbs
- Adverbs Affirmative, Negative, Doubt
- Adverbs of Manner
- Adverbs of Place
- Adverbs of Quantity
- Adverbs of Time
- Past Participle
- The Verb Hacer
- Verb Hacer - Discussing Time
- Verb Hacer - Discussing the Weather
- Eating at a Restaurant
- Idioms Using Vez
-
Imperfect Indicative - Imperfect Tense
- Imperfect Indicative - Imperfect Tense
- Imperfect Indicative - ar verbs
- Imperfect Indicative - er and ir verbs
- Imperfect Indicative - irregular verbs
- use of written accent
- ser vs. estar (intermediate)
- Negative Pronouns - Nada, Nadie, Nunca
- Indefinite Pronouns
- Conjunctions - pero, sino, sino que
- Superiority & Inferiority
- comparisons using adjectives & adverbs
- Preterite vs. Imperfect
- Relative Adjectives - cuyo, cuya, cuyos, cuyas
- Types of Adjectives
- Using prepositions after verbs
- Formal commands with usted, ustedes
- Spanish Conjunctions
- Coordinate Conjunctions
- Copulative Conjunctions
- Disjunctive Conjunctions
- Adversative Conjunctions
- Subordinate Conjunctions
- Causal Conjunctions
- Comparative Conjunctions
- Concessive Conjunctions
- Conditional Conjunctions
- Consecutive Conjunctions
- Continuative Conjunctions
- Final Conjunctions
- Modal Conjunctions
- Diminutive Terminations
- Augmentative Terminations
- Relative Pronouns & Adjectives
- Prepositions - Por vs. Para
- Gerund - Present Participle
- Imperative - Nosotros Commands
- Possessive Pronouns
- Imperfect Progressive
- Impersonal Verbs
- Impersonal expressions with "se"
-
Future Indicative - Future Tense
- Future - Regular Verbs
- Future - Irregular Verbs
- Future - er verbs whose infinitives drop the e
- Future - stems end in l or n change the e of the ending to d
- Future - completely irregular stems
-
Commands - Imperative
- Imperative - Commands
- Formal (usted) Commands
- Affirmative (tú) Commands
- Irregular (tú) Commands
- Negative (tú) Commands
- Nosotros Commands
-
Prepositions
- Prepositions
- Preposition "a"
- Preposition "de"
- Preposition before an Infinitive
- Preposition Plus Pronoun
- Preposition Plus Noun
- Verbs followed by a Preposition
- Compound Prepositions
-
The Compound Tenses
- The Compound Tenses
- The Perfect Tenses
- Gerund - Present Participle
- Present Perfect
- Past Perfect - Pluperfect
- Preterite Perfect - Past Anterior
- Future Perfect
- Perfect Infinitive
-
The Progressive Tenses
- The Progressive Tenses
- Present Progressive
- Imperfect Progressive
- Past Progressive
- Future Progressive
-
The Subjunctive Mood
- The Subjunctive Mood
- Present Subjunctive
- Present Subjunctive - Regular -ar verbs
- Present Subjunctive - Regular -er verbs
- Present Subjunctive - Regular -ir verbs
- Present Subjunctive - Irregular Verbs
- Forming "if" Clauses
-
The Subjunctive Mood
- Present Perfect Subjunctive
- Present Perfect Subjunctive Regular Verbs
- Present Perfect Subjunctive Irregular Verbs
-
The Conditional Mood
- Conditional Mood
- Conditional Simple - Regular Verbs
- Conditional Simple - Irregular Verbs
- Conditional Perfect
- Conditional Progressive
-
The Imperfect Subjunctive
- Imperfect Subjunctive
- Imperfect Subjunctive - Regular Verbs
- Imperfect Subjunctive - Irregular Verbs
-
The Subjunctive Mood
- Past Perfect Subjunctive - Pluperfect Subjunctive
- Past Perfect Subjunctive
- Future Subjunctive
Popular Phrase:
nuestras fronteras
| Spanish Games
Conjugated Verb:
condolerse - condole
[ click for full conjugation ]

