How do you conjugate the command form of "ser?" Thanks.
Replies to This Discussion
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Sé
Sed
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The fact that when I was in school, my courses did not include intensive lessons in what we called english. My classes were more directed to the business use of the english language. We did not really go into tenses etc. Now here I am in my mid 60's trying to understand present, future, imperfect and so on. In the original question of this thread the poster asked about the "command conjugation of ser". Would that be the same as the "imperative"? I have some frustration because of this handicap but I am still very much enjoying learning a new language.
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Yes, you are correct, an imperative statement is a command. You might find the book 301 Spanish Verbs helpful.
You probably know that all verbs in Spanish end in either -ar, -er, or -ir. How they are conjugated depends on which type they are. I think most basic Spanish courses follow a sequence similar to the following:
First learn present tense, then positive and negative commands (which, as you see, are conjugated differently in Spanish). Then move on to preterit & imperfect (the two past tenses in Spanish), and future. After that you can worry about subjuntive (which is all but obsolete in English, although it occasionally occurs in phrases like "If it were to rain . . ."), and compound tenses using "haber" (to have). BTW, many English learners, unless they are at a very advanced level, ignore the vosotros conjugations because they are archaic.
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gracia
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Thanks Eddy. Would you also know all of the forms? Tu, Usted, Ustedes and Nosotros?
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I may be wrong but I think the full list is as follows.
tú sé
él/ella/usted sea
nosotros seamos
vosotros sed
ellos/ustedes sean
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go to this site. it has almost all the verbs conjugated. about 15,000 of them
http://users.ipfw.edu/JEHLE/VERBLIST.HTM
you will find about 150 conjugations of "ser"
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don't forget the negatives. (also known as the subjunctive)
no seas
no sea
no seamos
no seáis
no sean
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am i missing something here. the question was how to conjugate "ser" which i translate as "to be"
Sed is thirst, and beyond that I am lost with the above threads.
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the question was specifically about the 'command' conjugation of ser. yes, ser means to be. when conjugated in the imperative the following forms are seen:
sé tú/no seas tú
sea ud./no sea ud.
seamos nosotros/no seamos nosotros
sed vosotros/no seáis vosotros
sean uds./no sean uds.
the yo form is typically not used in the imperative (in the rare cases when it is appropriate, the subjunctive is used). the vosotros form of the command for ser does have the same form as the spanish word for hunger. context, however, would let you know which one you are dealing with. the command, in this case, will be far less common a word.
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