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integrar Negative Imperative Conjugation

integrarto integrate

B1regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

Negative commands use 'no' + present subjunctive: no integres (tú), no integre (usted), no integremos (nosotros), no integren (ustedes), no integréis (vosotros).

integrar Negative Imperative Forms

no integres
ustedno integre
nosotrosno integremos
vosotrosno integréis
ustedesno integren

When to Use the Negative Imperative

Use the negative imperative when telling someone *not* to do something directly. For 'integrar,' it means telling someone not to integrate something, perhaps to avoid confusion or a mistake.

Notes on integrar in the Negative Imperative

Negative commands use the present subjunctive, so 'integrar' follows the regular -ar present subjunctive pattern.

Example Sentences

  • No integres esa información todavía.

    Don't integrate that information yet.

  • No integre los comentarios sin aprobación.

    Do not integrate the comments without approval.

    usted

  • No integremos esto hasta que esté listo.

    Let's not integrate this until it's ready.

    nosotros

  • No integren datos duplicados.

    Do not integrate duplicate data.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the infinitive after 'no', like 'no integrar'.

    Correct: Use the present subjunctive: 'no integres' (tú) or 'no integre' (usted).

    Why: Spanish negative commands for tú, usted, ustedes, and vosotros require the subjunctive mood.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the 'no' when giving a negative command.

    Correct: Always include 'no' before the subjunctive verb form for negative commands.

    Why: The 'no' is essential to make the command negative.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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Related Tenses