
marcharse Conditional Conjugation
marcharse — to leave
The conditional uses the infinitive as a base: me marcharía, te marcharías, se marcharía, etc.
marcharse Conditional Forms
When to Use the Conditional
Use this to express 'would leave' in hypothetical situations or to be polite about wanting to exit.
Notes on marcharse in the Conditional
The verb is regular. Simply attach the -ía endings to the full infinitive 'marchar'.
Example Sentences
Me marcharía si tuviera dinero.
I would leave if I had money.
yo
¿Te marcharías de tu país por amor?
Would you leave your country for love?
tú
Dijo que se marcharía pronto.
He said he would leave soon.
él/ella/usted
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using 'me marcharía' when you should use the future 'me marcharé'.
Correct: Me marcharé (for certainty); Me marcharía (for if/then).
Why: The conditional is for possibilities, not for definite future plans.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: me marcho
The present tense of marcharse is regular: me marcho, te marchas, se marcha, nos marchamos, os marcháis, se marchan.
Preterite
yo: me marché
The preterite of marcharse is regular: me marché, te marchaste, se marchó, nos marchamos, os marchasteis, se marcharon.
Imperfect
yo: me marchaba
The imperfect of marcharse uses the -aba endings: me marchaba, te marchabas, se marchaba, etc.
Future
yo: me marcharé
The future tense is formed by adding endings to the infinitive: me marcharé, te marcharás, se marchará, etc.
Present Subjunctive
yo: me marche
The present subjunctive changes the -a to -e: me marche, te marches, se marche, etc.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: me marchara
The imperfect subjunctive uses the -ra endings: me marchara, te marcharas, se marchara, etc.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: márchate
The imperative for marcharse: márchate, márchese, marchémonos, marchaos, márchense.
Negative Imperative
yo: no te marches
Negative commands use the present subjunctive: no te marches, no se marche, no nos marchemos, etc.