Inklingo
A person trying to read a book while a small, playful dog jumps up and barks at them.

incomodar Affirmative Imperative Conjugation

incomodarto bother

B1regular -ar★★★
Quick answer:

Use 'incomoda' (tú), 'incomode' (usted), 'incomodemos' (nosotros), 'incomoden' (ustedes), 'incomodad' (vosotros) for direct commands.

incomodar Affirmative Imperative Forms

incomoda
ustedincomode
nosotrosincomodemos
vosotrosincomodad
ustedesincomoden

When to Use the Affirmative Imperative

You'll use the imperative mood to give direct orders or make requests. For 'incomodar,' this means telling someone directly not to bother you or someone else, or to stop bothering someone.

Notes on incomodar in the Affirmative Imperative

Incomodar is regular in the affirmative imperative. The 'tú' form is the same as the present indicative.

Example Sentences

  • ¡Incomoda a nadie, por favor!

    Don't bother anyone, please!

  • Señor, no incomode a los pasajeros.

    Sir, do not bother the passengers.

    usted

  • Incomodemos a los vecinos con nuestra música.

    Let's bother the neighbors with our music.

    nosotros

  • Incomodad a vuestros hermanos si queréis.

    Bother your siblings if you want.

    vosotros

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the subjunctive instead of the imperative for direct commands.

    Correct: For a direct command like 'Don't bother him!', use 'No lo incomodes' (subjunctive) not 'No incomodabas'.

    Why: Negative commands and all affirmative commands to 'usted/ustedes/él/ella' use the imperative or subjunctive forms, not indicative.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the vosotros affirmative imperative form.

    Correct: The correct vosotros affirmative imperative is 'incomodad'.

    Why: The vosotros imperative is formed by dropping the -r from the infinitive and adding -d.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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

Related Tenses