Inklingo
A pair of hands holding a brown leather shoe upside down, carefully pressing a new, thick rubber sole onto the bottom.

solar Negative Imperative Conjugation

solarto sole

C1regular -ar★★
Quick answer:

Negative commands for solar use the present subjunctive: no soles (tú), no sole (usted), no soléis (vosotros), no solen (ustedes).

solar Negative Imperative Forms

no soles
ustedno sole
nosotrosno solemos
vosotrosno soléis
ustedesno solen

When to Use the Negative Imperative

Use the negative imperative of solar to tell someone *not* to 'sole' a shoe. For example, 'No soles esta suela todavía' means 'Don't sole this sole yet.'

Notes on solar in the Negative Imperative

All negative commands in Spanish use the present subjunctive. Solar follows this rule perfectly, with regular -ar endings in the present subjunctive.

Example Sentences

  • No soles esta suela hasta que la pegue.

    Don't sole this sole until I glue it.

  • No sole usted esa suela, está en buen estado.

    Do not sole that sole; it's in good condition.

    usted

  • No soléis estas suelas si no estáis seguros.

    Do not sole these soles if you are not sure.

    vosotros

  • No solen las suelas de los zapatos nuevos.

    Do not sole the soles of the new shoes.

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the infinitive instead of the subjunctive.

    Correct: The correct form is 'no sole', not 'no solar'.

    Why: Negative commands in Spanish always use the subjunctive mood.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the 'no'.

    Correct: Always include 'no' before the conjugated verb for negative commands.

    Why: This is fundamental to forming negative commands.

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