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

llevarse Negative Imperative Conjugation

llevarseto take (something) with you

A2regular -ar★★★★★
Quick answer:

The negative imperative of llevarse uses the present subjunctive: ¡no te lleves, no se lleve, no nos llevemos, no os llevéis, no se lleven!

llevarse Negative Imperative Forms

¡No te lleves!
usted¡No se lleve!
nosotros¡No nos llevemos!
vosotros¡No os llevéis!
ustedes¡No se lleven!

When to Use the Negative Imperative

Use this to tell someone NOT to take something with them or away.

Notes on llevarse in the Negative Imperative

The reflexive pronoun must come BEFORE the verb in negative commands.

Example Sentences

  • ¡No te lleves mi cargador!

    Don't take my charger!

  • ¡No se lleven las sillas todavía!

    Don't take the chairs yet!

  • No nos llevemos el trabajo a casa.

    Let's not take work home.

    nosotros

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Putting the pronoun after the verb: ¡No llévate!

    Correct: ¡No te lleves!

    Why: In negative commands, pronouns always precede the verb.

Master Spanish verbs in context

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Related Tenses