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Spanish Imperative

Master Spanish imperative mood for commands and requests with comprehensive explanations and examples

intermediate
25 min read

Informal Commands (Tú)

Informal commands are used with people you address as 'tú' - friends, family, children, peers.

Positive Tú Commands

For regular verbs, use the third person singular (él/ella) form of the present tense:
¡Habla más despacio!
Speak more slowly!
¡Come las verduras!
Eat the vegetables!
¡Escribe la carta!
Write the letter!
¡Estudia para el examen!
Study for the exam!
¡Abre la ventana!
Open the window!

Irregular Positive Tú Commands

Some verbs have irregular positive tú command forms:
decir → ¡di!
say!
hacer → ¡haz!
do/make!
ir → ¡ve!
go!
poner → ¡pon!
put!
salir → ¡sal!
leave/go out!
ser → ¡sé!
be!
tener → ¡ten!
have!
venir → ¡ven!
come!

Negative Tú Commands

Negative tú commands use the present subjunctive form with 'no':
¡No hables tan rápido!
Don't speak so fast!
¡No comas tanto!
Don't eat so much!
¡No escribas en el libro!
Don't write in the book!
¡No vayas solo!
Don't go alone!
¡No seas tonto!
Don't be silly!

Formal Commands (Usted/Ustedes)

Formal commands are used with people you address as 'usted' or 'ustedes' - strangers, authority figures, formal situations.

Usted Commands

Both positive and negative usted commands use the present subjunctive form:
¡Hable más despacio, por favor!
Please speak more slowly!
¡No fume aquí!
Don't smoke here!
¡Venga mañana!
Come tomorrow!
¡No se preocupe!
Don't worry!
¡Tenga cuidado!
Be careful!

Ustedes Commands

Ustedes commands (used for both formal and informal plural in Latin America):
¡Hablen en español!
Speak in Spanish!
¡No corran en el pasillo!
Don't run in the hallway!
¡Vengan acá!
Come here!
¡No se vayan todavía!
Don't leave yet!
¡Siéntense, por favor!
Please sit down!

Commands with Pronouns

Object and reflexive pronouns attach to positive commands but precede negative commands.

Positive Commands with Pronouns

Pronouns attach to the end of positive commands:
¡Dímelo!
Tell it to me!
¡Cómpralo!
Buy it!
¡Levántate!
Get up!
¡Dáselo!
Give it to him/her!
¡Háblame!
Talk to me!

Negative Commands with Pronouns

Pronouns precede negative commands:
¡No me lo digas!
Don't tell it to me!
¡No lo compres!
Don't buy it!
¡No te levantes!
Don't get up!
¡No se lo des!
Don't give it to him/her!
¡No me hables!
Don't talk to me!

Softening Commands

Ways to make commands more polite and less direct:

Polite Expressions

Add polite words to soften commands:
¡Habla más despacio, por favor!
Please speak more slowly!
¿Podrías ayudarme?
Could you help me?
¿Te importaría cerrar la puerta?
Would you mind closing the door?
Si fueras tan amable...
If you would be so kind...
¿Serías tan amable de...?
Would you be so kind as to...?

Suggestions Instead of Commands

Use suggestions to be more diplomatic:
¿Por qué no vienes mañana?
Why don't you come tomorrow?
¿Qué tal si estudiamos juntos?
How about we study together?
Deberías descansar más.
You should rest more.
Sería mejor si llegaras temprano.
It would be better if you arrived early.