
victimar Negative Imperative Conjugation
victimar — to kill or murder
Negative commands use the present subjunctive with 'no': ¡No victimes! (you, sing.), ¡No victimen! (you all).
victimar Negative Imperative Forms
When to Use the Negative Imperative
Use the negative imperative to tell someone NOT to do something. It's formed using 'no' plus the present subjunctive. For example, 'No victimes sus promesas' means 'Don't victimize your promises'.
Notes on victimar in the Negative Imperative
Victimar follows the standard pattern for negative commands, using the present subjunctive forms with 'no'.
Example Sentences
¡No victimes a los inocentes!
Don't victimize the innocent!
tú
No victimemos nuestros sueños.
Let's not victimize our dreams.
nosotros
¡No victimen la información!
Don't victimize the information!
¡No victiméis su confianza!
Don't victimize their trust!
vosotros
Common Mistakes
Mistake: Using the infinitive after 'no'.
Correct: Instead of 'No victimar la verdad', say 'No victimes la verdad' (tú).
Why: Negative commands require a conjugated subjunctive form, not the infinitive.
Mistake: Confusing with affirmative imperative.
Correct: For 'Don't victimize me', use '¡No me victimés!' not '¡Victimame!' which would be positive.
Why: The negative is formed with 'no' + subjunctive, while the affirmative uses the imperative mood.
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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.
Conditional
yo: victimaría
Used for hypotheticals ('would'), polite requests, or future-in-the-past: Victimaría, victimarías, victimaría, etc.
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).