Inklingo
A small, simple figure walking down a winding path, actively moving away from a bright blue cottage, illustrating the act of departure.

marcharse Affirmative Imperative Conjugation

marcharseto leave

A1pronominal (reflexive) and regular -ar★★★★★
Quick answer:

The imperative for marcharse: márchate, márchese, marchémonos, marchaos, márchense.

marcharse Affirmative Imperative Forms

márchate
ustedmárchese
nosotrosmarchémonos
vosotrosmarchaos
ustedesmárchense

When to Use the Affirmative Imperative

Use this to tell someone to go away or to suggest that the group should leave.

Notes on marcharse in the Affirmative Imperative

Note the accent marks on almost all forms to maintain the stress. In 'marchaos', the -d is dropped.

Example Sentences

  • ¡Márchate de aquí ahora mismo!

    Get out of here right now!

  • Marchémonos antes de que empiece a llover.

    Let's leave before it starts raining.

    nosotros

  • Márchese por esa puerta, por favor.

    Please leave through that door.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Saying 'marchate' without the accent.

    Correct: márchate

    Why: When you attach pronouns to the end of a command, you often need an accent to keep the stress on the original syllable.

  • Mistake: Saying 'marchados' for the vosotros command.

    Correct: marchaos

    Why: For reflexive verbs in the vosotros imperative, you drop the -d before adding 'os'.

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Related Tenses