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cabrear Conditional Conjugation

cabrearto annoy

B1regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The conditional of 'cabrear' is regular: cabrearía, cabrearías, cabrearía, cabrearíamos, cabrearíais, cabrearían.

cabrear Conditional Forms

yocabrearía
cabrearías
él/ella/ustedcabrearía
nosotroscabrearíamos
vosotroscabrearíais
ellos/ellas/ustedescabrearían

When to Use the Conditional

Use the conditional for hypothetical situations ('I would get annoyed if...'), polite requests ('Would you annoy him for me?'), or to express future actions from a past perspective ('He said he would get annoyed').

Notes on cabrear in the Conditional

'Cabrear' is a regular -ar verb and follows the standard conditional tense conjugation, using the infinitive as the stem.

Example Sentences

  • Me cabrearía si me hicieras eso.

    I would get annoyed if you did that to me.

    yo

  • ¿Te cabrearías por un comentario así?

    Would you get annoyed by a comment like that?

  • Ellos se cabrearían si supieran la verdad.

    They would get annoyed if they knew the truth.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the imperfect subjunctive instead of the conditional for hypothetical results.

    Correct: Use 'Me cabrearía' (conditional) for the result clause in 'if' statements.

    Why: The conditional describes the likely outcome of a hypothetical situation.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the reflexive 'se' when it means 'to get annoyed'.

    Correct: Use 'Me cabrearía' (I would get annoyed) not 'Cabrearía' (I would annoy).

    Why: The reflexive pronoun is needed when the subject is the one experiencing the annoyance.

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Related Tenses