Inklingo
A mother pointing her finger while talking to a sad child who is looking down.

regañar Imperfect Subjunctive Conjugation

regañarto scold

A2regular -ar★★★★
Quick answer:

The imperfect subjunctive of regañar is regañara or regañase (e.g., yo regañara, tú regañaras, él regañara).

regañar Imperfect Subjunctive Forms

yoregañara
regañaras
él/ella/ustedregañara
nosotrosregañáramos
vosotrosregañarais
ellos/ellas/ustedesregañaran

When to Use the Imperfect Subjunctive

This tense is used for hypothetical situations in the past, wishes, or polite requests that didn't necessarily happen. Think 'if I were to scold...' or 'I wish you wouldn't scold...'.

Notes on regañar in the Imperfect Subjunctive

Regañar is regular in the imperfect subjunctive. You can use either the -ra or -se endings (e.g., regañara or regañase), though -ra is more common in many regions.

Example Sentences

  • Si yo regañara a mi hijo, él lloraría mucho.

    If I were to scold my son, he would cry a lot.

    yo

  • Me gustaría que no regañaras tanto a los perros.

    I wish you wouldn't scold the dogs so much.

  • El profesor actuó como si regañara a toda la clase.

    The teacher acted as if he were scolding the whole class.

    él/ella/usted

  • Ojalá ellos no regañaran por tonterías.

    Hopefully, they wouldn't scold over silly things.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the preterite instead of the imperfect subjunctive.

    Correct: For past hypotheticals or wishes, use 'regañara' or 'regañase', not 'regañé' or 'regañó'.

    Why: The imperfect subjunctive specifically handles unreal or hypothetical past situations, while the preterite describes completed actions.

  • Mistake: Confusing the -ra and -se forms.

    Correct: Both 'regañara' and 'regañase' are correct imperfect subjunctive forms, but 'regañara' is generally more common.

    Why: While interchangeable in meaning, regional preferences and stylistic choices might favor one over the other.

Master Spanish verbs in context

Memorizing tables only gets you so far. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories to see verbs like 'regañar' used naturally — in the tenses you're learning.

Related Tenses