
lesionar Present Subjunctive Conjugation
lesionar — to injure
The present subjunctive of lesionar (lesione, lesiones, etc.) follows expressions of desire, doubt, or emotion.
lesionar Present Subjunctive Forms
When to Use the Present Subjunctive
Use the present subjunctive of lesionar after verbs or expressions that convey doubt, emotion, desire, or uncertainty. For instance, 'Espero que no te lesiones.' (I hope you don't injure yourself).
Notes on lesionar in the Present Subjunctive
Lesionar is regular in the present tense of the indicative, and it is also regular in the present subjunctive. The forms are derived from the 'yo' form of the present indicative ('lesiono'), dropping the -o and adding the opposite vowel endings (-e, -es, -e, -emos, -éis, -en).
Example Sentences
Espero que no te lesiones en el partido.
I hope you don't injure yourself in the match.
tú
Me alegra que no se lesionaran.
I'm glad they didn't injure themselves.
ellos/ellas/ustedes
Dudo que el jugador se lesione hoy.
I doubt the player will get injured today.
él/ella/usted
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the present indicative instead of the present subjunctive.
Correct: After expressions of doubt like 'dudo que', use the subjunctive: 'Dudo que se lesiona' is incorrect; it should be 'Dudo que se lesione'.
Why: Certain trigger phrases in Spanish require the subjunctive mood to express uncertainty or emotion.
Master Spanish verbs in context
Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'lesionar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.
Related Tenses
Present
yo: lesiono
The present tense of lesionar (lesiono, lesionas, etc.) indicates current or habitual injuries.
Preterite
yo: lesioné
The preterite of lesionar (lesioné, lesionaste, etc.) describes completed past injuries.
Imperfect
yo: lesionaba
The imperfect of lesionar (lesionaba, lesionabas, etc.) describes ongoing or habitual past injuries.
Future
yo: lesionaré
The future tense of lesionar (lesionaré, lesionarás, etc.) talks about future injuries or probabilities.
Conditional
yo: lesionaría
The conditional of lesionar (lesionaría, lesionarías, etc.) discusses hypothetical injuries ('would injure').
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: lesionara
The imperfect subjunctive of lesionar (e.g., 'lesionara', 'lesionaras') is used for past hypotheticals or wishes.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: lesiona
Use the imperative of lesionar for direct commands like 'lesiona' (you, informal) or 'lesionen' (you all, formal).
Negative Imperative
yo: no lesiones
Form negative commands with 'no' + present subjunctive, like 'no lesiones' (don't injure).