Inklingo
A person with a wide-open mouth and big eyes looking at a glowing, magical treasure chest.

alucinar Negative Imperative Conjugation

alucinarto be blown away

B1regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

Use 'no alucines' (tú) and other forms for negative commands, like 'No alucines tanto'.

alucinar Negative Imperative Forms

no alucines
ustedno alucine
nosotrosno alucinemos
vosotrosno alucinéis
ustedesno alucinen

When to Use the Negative Imperative

Negative commands tell someone NOT to do something. With 'alucinar', you might tell someone not to get too carried away or too shocked by something.

Notes on alucinar in the Negative Imperative

Negative commands in Spanish are formed using the present subjunctive. 'Alucinar' is regular in the present subjunctive.

Example Sentences

  • No alucines, solo es una película.

    Don't be blown away, it's just a movie.

  • No alucinemos con cada noticia falsa.

    Let's not get blown away by every fake news story.

    nosotros

  • No alucinen si el precio parece alto al principio.

    Don't be blown away if the price seems high at first.

    ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the indicative present 'no alucinas' instead of the negative imperative.

    Correct: For a negative command, use 'no alucines' (tú). 'Tú no alucinas' means 'you do not get blown away' (a statement).

    Why: The negative imperative requires the subjunctive mood.

Master Spanish verbs in context

Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'alucinar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.

Related Tenses