The Present Tense (Presente)

In Spanish, the present tense is used to talk about actions that happen right now, habits, or general truths.

Regular -AR Verbs

Verbs ending in -ar are the most common. Remove -ar and add these endings:

yo -o (I) → hablo (I speak)
-as (you) → hablas (you speak)
él/ella/usted -a (he/she) → habla (he speaks)
nosotros -amos (we) → hablamos (we speak)
vosotros -áis (you all) → habláis
ellos/ellas -an (they) → hablan (they speak)

The verb "hablar" (to speak) is used as an example throughout Spanish grammar—it's the most regular!

Regular -ER & -IR Verbs

-ER verbs (like comer = to eat) and -IR verbs (like vivir = to live) share most endings:

yo -o → como, vivo
-es → comes, vives
él/ella/usted -e → come, vive
nosotros -emos/-imos → comemos, vivimos
ellos/ellas -en → comen, viven

Word Order & Context

In Spanish, the subject pronoun is often omitted because the verb ending tells you who is doing the action.

Hablo español. = I speak Spanish. (subject "yo" is understood)

¿Hablas inglés? = Do you speak English?

María habla tres idiomas. = Maria speaks three languages.

Use the subject pronoun when you want to emphasize or clarify who is speaking:

Yo hablo español, pero mi hermano habla inglés. (I speak Spanish, but my brother speaks English.)

Common Regular Verbs

Here are some useful regular verbs you'll see often:

  • hablar (to speak) — hablo, hablas, habla…
  • escuchar (to listen) — escucho, escuchas, escucha…
  • estudiar (to study) — estudio, estudias, estudia…
  • trabajar (to work) — trabajo, trabajas, trabaja…
  • comer (to eat) — como, comes, come…
  • beber (to drink) — bebo, bebes, bebe…
  • vivir (to live) — vivo, vives, vive…
  • escribir (to write) — escribo, escribes, escribe…

Practice: Matching Verbs to Subjects

Can you match the correct verb form?

nosotros / vivirvivimos (we live)

tú / estudiarestudias (you study)

ellos / comercomen (they eat)

Common Mistakes

Traps for English speakers

These are the errors English speakers make most often.

Yo soy 20 años
Yo tengo 20 años
Use tener for age, not ser.
Yo hablo no inglés
Yo no hablo inglés
No goes before the verb.
Nosotros somos hambre
Tenemos hambre
Use tener with hambre.

Key Takeaways

  • Spanish verbs change based on who is doing the action.
  • -AR, -ER, -IR endings follow predictable patterns.
  • Subject pronouns are usually omitted—the verb tells you enough.
  • Practice regularly to build fluency with conjugations.

Practice →