Inklingo
A person lifting a heavy barbell in a simple gym setting.

ejercitar Conditional Conjugation

ejercitarto exercise

A2regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The conditional tense of ejercitar is regular: ejercitaría, ejercitarías, ejercitaría, ejercitaríamos, ejercitaríais, ejercitarían.

ejercitar Conditional Forms

yoejercitaría
ejercitarías
él/ella/ustedejercitaría
nosotrosejercitaríamos
vosotrosejercitaríais
ellos/ellas/ustedesejercitarían

When to Use the Conditional

Use the conditional tense of ejercitar for hypothetical situations ('I would exercise if I had time'), polite requests ('Would you exercise with me?'), or future-in-the-past actions ('He said he would exercise').

Notes on ejercitar in the Conditional

Ejercitar is regular in the conditional tense. The infinitive is used as the stem, and the conditional endings are added.

Example Sentences

  • Yo ejercitaría más si tuviera tiempo.

    I would exercise more if I had time.

    yo

  • ¿Tú ejercitarías tu paciencia en esa situación?

    Would you exercise your patience in that situation?

  • Él ejercitaría su influencia para ayudar.

    He would exercise his influence to help.

    él/ella/usted

  • Nosotros ejercitaríamos juntos, pero estoy enfermo.

    We would exercise together, but I am sick.

    nosotros

  • Vosotros ejercitaríais mejor si practicarais más.

    You all would exercise better if you practiced more.

    vosotros

  • Ellos ejercitarían su derecho a opinar.

    They would exercise their right to give an opinion.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the simple future instead of the conditional for hypothetical situations, e.g., 'Ejercitaré si tengo tiempo'.

    Correct: For hypotheticals ('would'), use the conditional: 'Ejercitaría si tuviera tiempo'.

    Why: The conditional mood is used for hypothetical or contrary-to-fact situations.

  • Mistake: Confusing conditional endings with future endings, e.g., 'ejercitaré' instead of 'ejercitaría'.

    Correct: Conditional endings have an accent on the 'i': '-ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían'.

    Why: The accent mark is crucial for distinguishing conditional forms from future forms.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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

Related Tenses