Inklingo
A simple character illustration showing intense anger, depicted by a deeply furrowed brow, a large frown, and steam symbolically rising from the top of the character's head.

enojar Imperfect Conjugation

enojarto get angry

A1regular -ar★★★★★
Quick answer:

Use enojaba(s), enojábamos, enojabais, enojaban for ongoing or habitual past anger.

enojar Imperfect Forms

yoenojaba
enojabas
él/ella/ustedenojaba
nosotrosenojábamos
vosotrosenojabais
ellos/ellas/ustedesenojaban

When to Use the Imperfect

The imperfect tense describes ongoing states of anger in the past, habitual anger, or sets the background scene for another past event. It paints a picture of someone being angry over a period or regularly.

Notes on enojar in the Imperfect

Enojarse is regular in the imperfect indicative tense. It follows the standard pattern for -ar verbs, with the addition of the reflexive pronouns.

Example Sentences

  • Mi hermano se enojaba cada vez que perdía.

    My brother used to get angry every time he lost.

    él/ella/usted

  • Yo me enojaba por todo cuando era joven.

    I used to get angry about everything when I was young.

    yo

  • ¿Te enojabas mucho con tus padres?

    Did you often get angry with your parents?

  • Ellos se enojaban porque el tren siempre llegaba tarde.

    They were getting angry because the train was always late.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using preterite instead of imperfect: 'Me enojé cada vez que perdía.'

    Correct: Use imperfect for habitual past actions: 'Me enojaba cada vez que perdía.'

    Why: The imperfect describes repeated or ongoing actions in the past, while the preterite describes a single, completed action.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the reflexive pronoun: 'Él enojaba fácilmente.'

    Correct: Include the reflexive pronoun: 'Él se enojaba fácilmente.'

    Why: 'Enojarse' is reflexive. The pronoun 'se' is necessary to indicate that he was getting angry.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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

Related Tenses