
amontonar Future Conjugation
amontonar — to pile up
Use the future tense of amontonar (amontonaré, amontonarás, etc.) to talk about actions that will happen.
amontonar Future Forms
When to Use the Future
The future tense is used to talk about things that *will* happen. It can also express probability or conjecture about the present, like 'He will be piling up...' (meaning 'He's probably piling up...').
Notes on amontonar in the Future
Amontonar is regular in the future tense. The stem is the infinitive 'amontonar', and you add the standard future endings.
Example Sentences
Mañana amontonaré todos los documentos viejos.
Tomorrow I will pile up all the old documents.
yo
¿Tú amontonarás las cajas en el garaje?
Will you pile up the boxes in the garage?
tú
Ella amontonará los libros en la biblioteca.
She will pile up the books in the library.
él/ella/usted
Nosotros amontonaremos los muebles para la mudanza.
We will pile up the furniture for the move.
nosotros
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the present tense 'amontono' to express a future action.
Correct: Use the future tense 'amontonaré' for actions that will definitely happen.
Why: While the present can sometimes imply future, the future tense is more direct and certain.
Mistake: Forgetting the accent on the future endings (e.g., 'amontonaré').
Correct: All future tense endings require an accent mark (e.g., 'amontonaré', 'amontonarás').
Why: The accent indicates the stressed syllable in these forms.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: amontono
Use the present tense of amontonar (amontono, amontonas, etc.) for current or habitual actions.
Preterite
yo: amontoné
Use the preterite of amontonar (amontoné, amontonaste, etc.) for completed actions in the past.
Imperfect
yo: amontonaba
Use the imperfect of amontonar (amontonaba, amontonabas, etc.) for ongoing or habitual past actions.
Conditional
yo: amontonaría
Use the conditional of amontonar (amontonaría, amontonarías, etc.) for hypotheticals ('would') and polite requests.
Present Subjunctive
yo: amontone
Use the present subjunctive (amontone, amontones, etc.) after expressions of desire, doubt, or emotion with amontonar.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: amontonara
Use the imperfect subjunctive (amontonara/amontonase) for past hypotheticals, wishes, or doubts with amontonar.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: amontona
Use amontona, amontone, amontonemos, amontonad, amontonen for direct commands with amontonar.
Negative Imperative
yo: no amontones
Use no amontones, no amontone, no amontonemos, no amontonéis, no amontonen for negative commands with amontonar.