
marcharse Present Subjunctive Conjugation
marcharse — to leave
The present subjunctive changes the -a to -e: me marche, te marches, se marche, etc.
marcharse Present Subjunctive Forms
When to Use the Present Subjunctive
Use this when there is doubt, emotion, or a wish about someone leaving (e.g., 'I want you to leave').
Notes on marcharse in the Present Subjunctive
Marcharse is regular. The stem remains 'march-' and the endings are the standard -er/-ir style endings for -ar verbs.
Example Sentences
No quiero que te marches.
I don't want you to leave.
tú
Es posible que se marchen mañana.
It is possible that they leave tomorrow.
ellos/ellas/ustedes
Cuando nos marchemos, apagaremos la luz.
When we leave, we will turn off the light.
nosotros
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using 'que te marchas' (indicative) after 'no quiero'.
Correct: No quiero que te marches.
Why: Verbs of influence/wishing like 'querer' always trigger the subjunctive.
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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.
Conditional
yo: me marcharía
The conditional uses the infinitive as a base: me marcharía, te marcharías, se marcharía, 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.