
casarse Present Subjunctive Conjugation
casarse — to get married
The present subjunctive of casarse is regular: me case, te cases, se case, nos casemos, os caséis, se casen.
casarse Present Subjunctive Forms
When to Use the Present Subjunctive
Use this when expressing desires, doubts, or requirements about a marriage (e.g., 'I hope they get married' or 'I don't think they'll get married').
Notes on casarse in the Present Subjunctive
Regular -ar subjunctive endings (-e, -es, -e, -emos, -éis, -en).
Example Sentences
Espero que te cases por amor.
I hope you marry for love.
tú
Dudo que se casen este año.
I doubt they will get married this year.
ellos/ellas/ustedes
Busco a alguien que se case conmigo.
I'm looking for someone who will marry me.
él/ella/usted
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the indicative 'casan' after 'Espero que'.
Correct: Espero que se casen.
Why: Verbs of hope/desire like 'esperar' require the subjunctive in the following clause.
Master Spanish verbs in context
Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'casarse' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.
Related Tenses
Present
yo: me caso
The present tense of casarse is regular: me caso, te casas, se casa, nos casamos, os casáis, se casan.
Preterite
yo: me casé
The preterite of casarse is regular: me casé, te casaste, se casó, nos casamos, os casasteis, se casaron.
Imperfect
yo: me casaba
The imperfect of casarse is regular and follows the -ar pattern: me casaba, te casabas, se casaba, nos casábamos, os casabais, se casaban.
Future
yo: me casaré
The future of casarse uses the infinitive as the stem: me casaré, te casarás, se casará, nos casaremos, os casaréis, se casarán.
Conditional
yo: me casaría
The conditional of casarse is regular: me casaría, te casarías, se casaría, nos casaríamos, os casaríais, se casarían.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: me casara
The imperfect subjunctive of casarse uses the -ra endings: me casara, te casaras, se casara, nos casáramos, os casarais, se casaran.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: cásate
The affirmative imperative of casarse attaches pronouns to the end: cásate, cásese, casémonos, casaos, cásense.
Negative Imperative
yo: no te cases
The negative imperative of casarse uses the present subjunctive: no te cases, no se case, no nos casemos, no os caséis, no se casen.