
haberse Negative Imperative Conjugation
haberse — to deal with
The negative imperative uses 'no' + present subjunctive: no te hayas, no se haya.
haberse Negative Imperative Forms
When to Use the Negative Imperative
Used to tell someone NOT to conduct themselves in a certain way.
Notes on haberse in the Negative Imperative
It uses the 'hay-' stem from the present subjunctive.
Example Sentences
No te hayas con tanta rudeza.
Don't conduct yourself with such rudeness.
tú
No se hayan con egoísmo.
Don't act/deal with selfishness.
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using 'no te habas'.
Correct: The correct form is 'no te hayas'.
Why: All negative commands must use the subjunctive forms.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: me he
The present of haberse uses the short forms: me he, te has, se ha, nos hemos.
Preterite
yo: me hube
The preterite of haberse uses the irregular 'hub-' stem: me hube, te hubiste, se hubo.
Imperfect
yo: me había
The imperfect of haberse is regular in its endings: me había, te habías, se había.
Future
yo: me habré
The future of haberse uses the irregular stem 'habr-': me habré, te habrás, se habrá.
Conditional
yo: me habría
The conditional uses the irregular 'habr-' stem: me habría, te habrías, se habría.
Present Subjunctive
yo: me haya
The present subjunctive uses the 'hay-' stem: me haya, te hayas, se haya.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: me hubiera
The imperfect subjunctive uses the 'hubier-' stem: me hubiera, te hubieras, se hubiera.
Affirmative Imperative
yo:
The imperative of haberse is rare and highly formal: héte, háyase, hayámonos.