
antojarse Future Conjugation
antojarse — to feel like
The future tense of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojaré' or 'se antojará') predicts or speculates about future cravings.
antojarse Future Forms
When to Use the Future
Use the future tense to make predictions or express probability about future desires. It answers questions like 'What will someone feel like having later?' or 'What might they want to do?'. For example, 'Mañana se me antojará algo diferente' (Tomorrow I'll feel like something different) or 'Seguro que te antojará un postre después de esa cena' (Surely you'll feel like a dessert after that dinner).
Notes on antojarse in the Future
'Antojarse' is regular in the future tense. The future stem is the infinitive 'antojar-', and you add the standard endings (-é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án). Remember the typical construction with the indirect object pronoun (me, te, le, etc.).
Example Sentences
Me antojaré de mariscos si vamos a la costa.
I will feel like seafood if we go to the coast.
yo
¿Qué se te antojará comer para tu cumpleaños?
What will you feel like eating for your birthday?
tú
Seguro se antojará una siesta después de tanto trabajar.
He/She will surely feel like a nap after working so much.
él/ella/usted
Nos antojaremos de algo exótico para celebrar.
We will feel like something exotic to celebrate.
nosotros
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the present tense or 'ir a + infinitive' instead of the future.
Correct: For predictions or pure future speculation about cravings, use the future tense: 'se antojará'.
Why: While 'ir a + infinitive' can express future, the simple future tense often carries a stronger sense of prediction or probability, fitting well with speculating about desires.
Mistake: Forgetting the indirect object pronoun.
Correct: Always include the indirect object pronoun: 'Me antojaré', 'Te antojarás', 'Se antojará'.
Why: The structure of 'antojarse' requires this pronoun to indicate who is experiencing the craving.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: me antojo
The present tense of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojo' or 'se antoja') expresses current cravings or things one feels like having/doing.
Preterite
yo: me antojé
The preterite of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojé' or 'se antojó') describes a specific past craving or feeling like something.
Imperfect
yo: me antojaba
The imperfect of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojaba' or 'se antojaba') describes habitual or ongoing past cravings or feelings.
Conditional
yo: me antojaría
The conditional of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojaría' or 'se antojaría') expresses hypothetical desires or polite suggestions.
Present Subjunctive
yo: me antoje
The present subjunctive of 'antojarse' (like 'me antoje' or 'se antoje') expresses wishes, doubts, or emotions about current or future desires.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: me antojara
The imperfect subjunctive of 'antojarse' (like 'me antojara' or 'se antojara') is used for past hypotheticals or wishes.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: antójate
Use the imperative of 'antojarse' for direct commands like 'antójate' (make yourself want something) or 'antójate' (let yourself crave something).
Negative Imperative
yo: no te antojes
Use 'no te antojes' (don't make yourself want something) or 'no se antoje' (don't let yourself crave something) for negative commands.