
victimar Conditional Conjugation
victimar — to kill or murder
Used for hypotheticals ('would'), polite requests, or future-in-the-past: Victimaría, victimarías, victimaría, etc.
victimar Conditional Forms
When to Use the Conditional
The conditional tense is for hypothetical situations ('I would victimize...'), polite requests ('Would you victimize...?'), or to talk about something that was in the future from a past perspective ('He said he would victimize...'). For example, 'Si tuviera tiempo, victimaría el proyecto' (If I had time, I would victimize the project).
Notes on victimar in the Conditional
Victimar is regular in the conditional tense. The stem is the full infinitive 'victimar', and you add the standard conditional endings (-ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían).
Example Sentences
Yo victimaría la verdad si pudiera.
I would victimize the truth if I could.
yo
¿Tú victimarías la escena?
Would you victimize the scene?
tú
Él victimaría la tarea si no estuviera ocupado.
He would victimize the task if he weren't busy.
él/ella/usted
Ellos victimarían el plan si tuvieran el dinero.
They would victimize the plan if they had the money.
ellos/ellas/ustedes
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the conditional for a simple future action.
Correct: Say 'Mañana victimaré' (Tomorrow I will victimize), not 'Mañana victimaría' (which implies a condition).
Why: The conditional implies uncertainty or a condition, while the future tense states a definite future action.
Mistake: Confusing conditional endings with future endings.
Correct: The conditional endings are -ía, -ías, -ía, -íamos, -íais, -ían. The future endings are -é, -ás, -á, -emos, -éis, -án.
Why: They are similar in structure but signify different grammatical ideas.
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Related Tenses
Present
yo: victimo
Used for current actions, habits, or general truths: Victimo, victimas, victiman.
Preterite
yo: victimé
Used for completed past actions: Victimé, victimaste, victimó, victimamos, victimasteis, victimaron.
Imperfect
yo: victimaba
Used for past ongoing actions, descriptions, or habits: Victimaba, victimabas, victimaba, victimábamos, victimabais, victimaban.
Future
yo: victimaré
Used for future actions or probability: Victimare, victimarás, victimará, victimaremos, victimaréis, victimarán.
Present Subjunctive
yo: victime
Expresses wishes, doubts, emotions, or uncertainty: Espero que victimemos.
Imperfect Subjunctive
yo: victimara
Used for past hypotheticals, wishes, or polite requests: Si victimara, lo entendería.
Affirmative Imperative
yo: victima
Use the imperative forms to give direct commands: ¡Victima! (you, sing.), ¡Victimad! (you all, Spain).
Negative Imperative
yo: no victimes
Negative commands use the present subjunctive with 'no': ¡No victimes! (you, sing.), ¡No victimen! (you all).