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A cartoon person walking cheerfully while carrying a brightly colored red suitcase, illustrating the act of taking something along.

llevarse Affirmative Imperative Conjugation

llevarseto take (something) with you

A2regular -ar★★★★★
Quick answer:

The affirmative imperative of llevarse is: ¡llévate (tú), llévese (usted), llevémonos (nosotros), llevaos (vosotros), llévense (ustedes)!

llevarse Affirmative Imperative Forms

¡Llévate!
usted¡Llévase!
nosotros¡Llevémonos!
vosotros¡Llevaos!
ustedes¡Llévensen!

When to Use the Affirmative Imperative

Use this to tell someone to take something with them or to suggest that people should get along.

Notes on llevarse in the Affirmative Imperative

In affirmative commands, the pronoun is attached to the end of the verb. An accent is often needed to keep the stress in the right place.

Example Sentences

  • ¡Llévate el paraguas, va a llover!

    Take the umbrella, it's going to rain!

  • Llévese este folleto para más información.

    Take this brochure for more information.

  • ¡Llevaos las sobras de la cena!

    Take the leftovers from dinner! (plural informal)

    vosotros

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Forgetting the accent: llevate.

    Correct: llévate

    Why: When you attach a pronoun to a command, you often need an accent to maintain the original stress of the verb.

  • Mistake: Using 'llevate' for vosotros.

    Correct: llevaos

    Why: The 'd' in the vosotros command (llevad) is dropped when adding 'os'.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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Related Tenses