Master the subjunctive with targeted exercises. Indicative vs subjunctive in context.
The subjunctive appears after expressions of doubt, emotion, desire, and impersonal judgments. Practice choosing the right mood.
Creer que, es cierto que, es verdad que, es obvio que → INDICATIVE. No creer que, dudar que, es posible que, es probable que → SUBJUNCTIVE.
Wishes (querer, desear, preferir), Emotions (alegrarse, temer, molestar), Impersonal (es importante, es posible), Recommendations (recomendar, sugerir), Doubt (dudar, no creer), Ojalá.
Cuando, hasta que, después de que, tan pronto como take subjunctive for FUTURE/HYPOTHETICAL actions. They take indicative for HABITUAL/PAST actions. Exception: Antes de que ALWAYS takes subjunctive.
1. 'Es importante que _____ (estudiar)':
2. 'Creo que ella _____ (ser) simpática':
3. 'Dudo que _____ (llover) mañana':
4. 'Antes de que tú _____' always takes:
5. 'Me alegra que _____ (estar) aquí':
6. 'Cuando _____ (tener) tiempo, leo' (habitual):
7. 'No creo que _____ (poder) venir':
8. 'Ojalá que _____ (ganar) el partido':
9. 'Es verdad que Madrid _____ (ser) grande':
10. 'Quiero que me _____ (decir) la verdad':
The subjunctive is one of the biggest challenges for Spanish learners. Regular practice with these trigger patterns helps you develop an instinct for when to use it.
Rather than memorizing rules, learn to recognize trigger expressions. When you see quiero que, espero que, es importante que, your brain should automatically switch to subjunctive mode.
Free tools for translation, text-to-speech and language learning.
▶ All Lessons✎ Translator