"Go" Verbs
Stem Changers(e-ie)
Stem Changers(o-ue)
The Big Three
Mixed Irregulars
100

The Conjugation: Yo form of tener

Tengo

100

The Conjugation: Él form of querer

Quiere

100

The Conjugation: Ellos form of poder

Pueden

100

The Conjugation: Yo form of ser

Soy

100

The Conjugation: Tú form of hacer

Haces

200

The Conjugation: Nosotros form of poner

Ponemos

200

The Conjugation: Tú form of empezar

Empiezas

200

The Conjugation: Ustedes form of dormir

Duermen

200

The Conjugation: Ella form of estar

Está

200

The Conjugation: Yo form of saber

300

The Conjugation: Yo form of traer (to bring)

Traigo

300

The Conjugation: Usted form of preferir (to prefer)

Prefiere

300

The Conjugation: Yo form of contar (to count/tell)

Cuento

300

The Conjugation: Tú form of ser

Eres

300

The Conjugation: Ellos form of ver (to see)

Ven
400

The Conjugation: The tú form of oír (to hear), which is irregular in all but nosotros and vosotros.

Oyes

400

VThe Conjugation: The yo form of venir (to come), which has a stem change and an irregular ending.

Vengo

400

The Conjugation: The él form of jugar (to play), an irregular verb where u-ue

Juega

400

The Conjugation: The nosotros form of estar (to be).

Estamos

400

 The Conjugation: The yo form of satisfacer (to satisfy), which conjugates like hacer.

Satisfago

500

The Conjugation: The yo form of caer (to fall), which adds a 'g' to the stem.

Caigo

500

The Rule: The verb adquirir (to acquire) is an e-ie stem changer, but what makes it unique among the common e-ie verbs?

It is one of the few verbs that uses an i-ie change instead of e-ie in all forms except nosotros/vosotros.

500

The Conjugation: The yo form of oler (to smell), an o-ue verb that requires an h at the start of the stem-changed forms.

Huelo

500

The Conjugation: The ellos form of ir (to go).

Van

500

The Conjugation: The yo form of caber (to fit), which has a unique -bo ending.

Queopo

M
e
n
u