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A person kneeling in a respectful bow before a glowing ancient stone pedestal in a peaceful forest grove.

venerar Present Subjunctive Conjugation

venerarto venerate

B2regular -ar★★
Quick answer:

The present subjunctive of venerar is 'venera' (yo/él/ella/usted) or 'veneren' (ellos/ellas/ustedes), used after wishes, doubts, and emotions.

venerar Present Subjunctive Forms

yovenere
veneres
él/ella/ustedvenere
nosotrosveneremos
vosotrosveneréis
ellos/ellas/ustedesveneren

When to Use the Present Subjunctive

Use the present subjunctive after expressions of desire, emotion, doubt, uncertainty, or impersonal statements. For 'venerar,' it's when you *wish* someone *would* venerate something, or when you're unsure if they *do* venerate it.

Notes on venerar in the Present Subjunctive

Venerar is regular in the present subjunctive. The stem doesn't change, and it follows the standard -ar verb pattern.

Example Sentences

  • Espero que veneres el esfuerzo de tus compañeros.

    I hope you venerate your colleagues' effort.

  • Dudo que ella venere esa política.

    I doubt that she venerates that policy.

    él/ella/usted

  • Queremos que veneremos la historia local.

    We want us to venerate local history.

    nosotros

  • Es importante que veneren las reglas.

    It's important that they venerate the rules.

    ellos/ellas/ustedes

Common Mistakes

  • Mistake: Using the present indicative instead of the present subjunctive.

    Correct: After verbs like 'esperar', 'dudar', 'querer', use the subjunctive: 'Espero que veneras' is wrong; 'Espero que veneres' is right.

    Why: Certain trigger phrases in Spanish require the subjunctive mood to express subjectivity.

  • Mistake: Forgetting the subjunctive for impersonal expressions.

    Correct: Use the subjunctive after 'es importante que', 'es bueno que', etc.: 'Es importante que veneran' is wrong; 'Es importante que veneren' is right.

    Why: Impersonal expressions often signal a need for the subjunctive.

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