Inklingo
A small child standing proudly in a colorful lion costume with a fuzzy mane.

disfrazar Negative Imperative Conjugation

disfrazarto dress up

A2spelling change -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The negative imperative of disfrazar always uses the Z to C spelling change: no disfraces, no disfrace, no disfracen.

disfrazar Negative Imperative Forms

no disfraces
ustedno disfrace
nosotrosno disfracemos
vosotrosno disfracéis
ustedesno disfracen

When to Use the Negative Imperative

Use this to tell someone NOT to dress up or not to disguise something.

Notes on disfrazar in the Negative Imperative

Because all negative commands use subjunctive endings, they all require the Z to C spelling change.

Example Sentences

  • No te disfraces de nada aburrido.

    Don't dress up as anything boring.

  • No disfracen la realidad de lo que pasó.

    Don't disguise the reality of what happened.

    ustedes

  • No nos disfracemos todavía.

    Let's not dress up yet.

    nosotros

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: no disfrazes

    Correct: no disfraces

    Why: Like the present subjunctive, the 'z' must change to 'c' before 'e'.

Master Spanish verbs in context

Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'disfrazar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.

Related Tenses