
agachar Future Conjugation
agachar — to lower
Use the future tense (agacharé) for actions that will happen or to express probability.
agachar Future Forms
When to Use the Future
The future tense is used to talk about actions that are certain to happen in the future. It can also be used to express probability or conjecture about the present or future – like saying 'He will probably be tired'.
Notes on agachar in the Future
Agachar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the infinitive 'agachar', and the standard future endings are added: agacharé, agacharás, agachará, agacharemos, agacharéis, agacharán.
Example Sentences
Mañana me agacharé para limpiar debajo de la cama.
Tomorrow I will bend down to clean under the bed.
yo
¿Te agacharás para ayudarme con esto?
Will you bend down to help me with this?
tú
El mecánico agachará el coche para revisarlo.
The mechanic will lower the car to inspect it.
él/ella/usted
Ellos agacharán la mirada si se sienten avergonzados.
They will lower their gaze if they feel ashamed.
ellos/ellas/ustedes
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the present tense instead of the future.
Correct: For a future action, use 'agacharé', not 'agacho'.
Why: The present tense describes current actions, while the future tense specifically refers to events that will occur later.
Mistake: Incorrectly forming the stem for the future tense.
Correct: The stem is the full infinitive 'agachar', not 'agach-'. So it's 'agacharé', not 'agacharé'.
Why: Unlike the conditional, the future tense uses the entire infinitive as its stem.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: agacho
Use the present tense of agachar for actions happening now or habitual actions.
Preterite
yo: agaché
Use the preterite of agachar for completed actions like lowering something at a specific past moment.
Imperfect
yo: agachaba
Use the imperfect of agachar for ongoing or habitual past actions, like constantly lowering something.
Conditional
yo: agacharía
Use the conditional (agacharía) for hypotheticals ('would') or polite requests.
Present Subjunctive
yo: agache
Use the present subjunctive (agache) after expressions of doubt, desire, emotion, or uncertainty.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: agachara
Use the imperfect subjunctive (agachara/agachase) for past hypotheticals or wishes.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: agacha
Use agacha (tú) and agachen (ustedes) for direct commands.
Negative Imperative
yo: no agaches
Use 'no agaches' (tú) and 'no agachen' (ustedes) for negative commands.