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delirar Affirmative Imperative Conjugation

delirarto be delirious

B2regular -ar★★★
Quick answer:

The imperative of 'delirar' is: delira (tú), delire (usted), deliremos (nosotros), deliren (ustedes), delirad (vosotros).

delirar Affirmative Imperative Forms

delira
usteddelire
nosotrosdeliremos
vosotrosdelirad
ustedesdeliren

When to Use the Affirmative Imperative

Use the affirmative imperative of 'delirar' to directly tell someone to 'delir' – perhaps jokingly or in a very specific, unusual context. For example, telling someone to stop being so delirious, or encouraging them to let loose in a wild way.

Notes on delirar in the Affirmative Imperative

The affirmative imperative of 'delirar' is regular for -ar verbs.

Example Sentences

  • ¡Delira con la música!

    Go crazy with the music!

  • ¡Deliren, que es una fiesta!

    Let loose, it's a party!

    ustedes

  • Señor, no delire tanto, por favor.

    Sir, don't be so delirious, please.

    usted

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present indicative instead of the imperative.

    Correct: Use 'delira' for 'tú', not 'deliras'.

    Why: The imperative is a direct command, distinct from stating a current action.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the 'vosotros' form 'delirad'.

    Correct: The correct 'vosotros' form is 'delirad'.

    Why: Regular -ar imperative verbs add '-ad' for vosotros.

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Related Tenses