desangrarConjugation
desangrar means to bleed (someone).
Complete Conjugation Tables
Reference all tenses and moods
Subjunctive
Imperfect Subjunctive
The imperfect subjunctive (e.g., 'desangrara', 'desangraras') is for past hypotheticals, wishes, or doubts.
Present Subjunctive
Present subjunctive forms like 'desangre' (yo/él/ella/usted) express wishes, doubts, or emotions.
Imperative
Negative Imperative
Negative commands use 'no' plus the present subjunctive, like 'no desangres' (tú).
Imperative
Use imperative forms like 'desangra' (tú) and 'desangre' (usted) for direct commands.
Indicative
Conditional
The conditional 'desangraría' means 'would bleed', used for hypotheticals or polite requests.
Preterite
The preterite of desangrar is regular: desangré, desangraste, desangró, desangramos, desangrasteis, desangraron.
Imperfect
The imperfect 'desangraba' describes ongoing or habitual past actions.
Present
The present tense 'desangro', 'desangras', 'desangra' describes current or habitual actions.
Future
The future tense 'desangraré', 'desangrarás', etc., indicates actions that will happen.
Practice Conjugations
Test your knowledge with interactive exercises
Take desangrar from tables to real Spanish
Conjugation tables are the start. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see 'desangrar' in action across real sentences — and build the instinct that native speakers have.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does desangrar mean in Spanish?
desangrar means "to bleed (someone)".
Is desangrar a regular or irregular verb?
desangrar is a regular -ar verb in Spanish.
How do you conjugate desangrar in the present tense?
The present tense of desangrar is: yo desangro, tú desangras, él/ella/usted desangra, nosotros desangramos, vosotros desangráis, ellos/ellas/ustedes desangran.
How do you conjugate desangrar in the preterite (past tense)?
The preterite of desangrar is: yo desangré, tú desangraste, él/ella/usted desangró, nosotros desangramos, vosotros desangrasteis, ellos/ellas/ustedes desangraron.
