
danzar Conditional Conjugation
danzar — to dance
The conditional of danzar is regular: add -ía endings to the infinitive (danzaría, danzarías, etc.).
danzar Conditional Forms
When to Use the Conditional
Use the conditional to say you 'would dance' if circumstances allowed, or to make polite suggestions.
Notes on danzar in the Conditional
Danzar is regular in the conditional. All forms have an accent on the 'í'.
Example Sentences
¿Danzarías en este escenario?
Would you dance on this stage?
tú
Danzaríamos si tuviéramos música.
We would dance if we had music.
nosotros
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Removing the -ar before adding the ending.
Correct: danzaría
Why: The conditional uses the full infinitive as the stem.
Master Spanish verbs in context
Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'danzar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.
Related Tenses
Present
yo: danzo
Danzar is a regular -ar verb in the present tense: danzo, danzas, danza, danzamos, danzáis, danzan.
Preterite
yo: dancé
Danzar is regular except for the 'yo' form (dancé), which changes 'z' to 'c'.
Imperfect
yo: danzaba
Danzar follows the regular -aba pattern: danzaba, danzabas, danzaba, danzábamos, danzabais, danzaban.
Future
yo: danzaré
Danzar is regular in the future: add endings to the full infinitive (danzaré, danzarás, etc.).
Present Subjunctive
yo: dance
Danzar undergoes a spelling change from 'z' to 'c' before 'e' in all forms: dance, dances, dance, dancemos, dancéis, dancen.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: danzara
The imperfect subjunctive of danzar is regular, based on the third-person plural preterite: danzara, danzaras, danzara, danzáramos, danzarais, danzaran.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: danza
Use 'danza' (tú) or 'dancad' (vosotros) for commands; formal forms (usted/ustedes) use the 'c' spelling change.
Negative Imperative
yo: no dances
All negative commands for danzar use the present subjunctive forms with 'no' and the 'z' to 'c' change.