
alucinar Affirmative Imperative Conjugation
alucinar — to be blown away
Use 'alucina' (tú) and other forms for direct commands, like '¡Alucina con esto!'.
alucinar Affirmative Imperative Forms
When to Use the Affirmative Imperative
The imperative is for giving direct commands or making requests. For 'alucinar', you'd use it to tell someone to be amazed by something.
Notes on alucinar in the Affirmative Imperative
The imperative of 'alucinar' is regular for all forms.
Example Sentences
¡Alucina con este truco de magia!
Be blown away by this magic trick!
tú
¡Alucinad con la vista desde aquí!
Be amazed by the view from here!
vosotros
Señores, alucinen con la presentación.
Gentlemen, be blown away by the presentation.
ustedes
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the subjunctive form 'alucines' instead of the imperative 'alucina' for tú.
Correct: For a direct command to 'tú', use 'alucina'. 'No alucines' is the negative command (don't be amazed).
Why: The imperative and subjunctive have different forms and uses; commands use the imperative.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: alucino
The present tense 'alucino' is for actions happening now or habitual amazement.
Preterite
yo: aluciné
The preterite of 'alucinar' is regular: aluciné, alucinaste, alucinó, alucinamos, alucinasteis, alucinaron.
Imperfect
yo: alucinaba
The imperfect 'alucinaba' describes ongoing or habitual past amazement.
Future
yo: alucinaré
The future tense 'alucinaré' indicates future amazement or probability.
Conditional
yo: alucinaría
The conditional 'alucinaría' expresses hypothetical amazement ('would be blown away') or polite suggestions.
Present Subjunctive
yo: alucine
The present subjunctive 'alucine' is used after expressions of doubt, desire, emotion, or influence.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: alucinara
The imperfect subjunctive 'alucinara' or 'alucinase' is for past hypotheticals or wishes.
Negative Imperative
yo: no alucines
Use 'no alucines' (tú) and other forms for negative commands, like 'No alucines tanto'.