Inklingo

asesinó

ah-seh-see-NOH/ase.siˈno/

asesinó means murdered in Spanish (He/She/It/You (formal) killed someone with malice).

murdered, assassinated

VerbB2regular arNeutral
A simplified, dramatic storybook illustration showing a cloaked, menacing figure standing over a single prone, motionless figure lying on the ground, symbolizing the act of being murdered.
infinitiveasesinar
gerundasesinando
past Participleasesinado

📝 In Action

La prensa reportó que el criminal asesinó a su víctima en la calle.

B2

The press reported that the criminal murdered his victim in the street.

El espía creyó que nadie lo vio cuando asesinó al líder enemigo.

B2

The spy believed no one saw him when he assassinated the enemy leader.

¿Usted asesinó a esa persona? Necesitamos saber la verdad.

B2

Did you murder that person? We need to know the truth. (Formal 'you')

Word Connections

Synonyms

  • mató (killed (less formal))
  • ejecutó (executed)

Common Collocations

  • asesinó brutalmentebrutally murdered
  • asesinó a sangre fríamurdered in cold blood

🔄 Conjugations

indicative

present

él/ella/ustedasesina
yoasesino
asesinas
ellos/ellas/ustedesasesinan
nosotrosasesinamos
vosotrosasesináis

imperfect

él/ella/ustedasesinaba
yoasesinaba
asesinabas
ellos/ellas/ustedesasesinaban
nosotrosasesinábamos
vosotrosasesinabais

preterite

él/ella/ustedasesinó
yoasesiné
asesinaste
ellos/ellas/ustedesasesinaron
nosotrosasesinamos
vosotrosasesinasteis

subjunctive

present

él/ella/ustedasesine
yoasesine
asesines
ellos/ellas/ustedesasesinen
nosotrosasesinemos
vosotrosasesinéis

imperfect

él/ella/ustedasesinara/asesinase
yoasesinara/asesinase
asesinaras/asesinases
ellos/ellas/ustedesasesinaran/asesinasen
nosotrosasesináramos/asesinásemos
vosotrosasesinarais/asesinaseis

✏️ Quick Practice

Quick Quiz: asesinó

Question 1 of 2

Which sentence correctly uses 'asesinó'?

📚 More Resources

👥 Word Family
🎵 Rhymes
📚 Etymology

The root of this word comes from the Arabic term *hashshāshīn*, which referred to members of a secretive group in the Middle Ages known for committing political murders. It entered Spanish through medieval Latin, keeping the meaning of intentional, planned killing.

First recorded: Around the 13th century (in related forms)

Cognates (Related words)

English: assassinateFrench: assassiner

💡 Master Spanish

Take your Spanish to the next level. Read 200+ illustrated and narrated Spanish stories tailored to your level with the Inklingo app!

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between 'asesinó' and 'mató'?

Both mean 'killed' in the past. 'Mató' (from *matar*) is the general term for killing, often used in less formal or even figurative ways (e.g., 'the heat killed me'). 'Asesinó' (from *asesinar*) specifically implies killing with malice, planning, or political intent (murder/assassination). It is a stronger, more formal word.

Does 'asesinó' always refer to a person?

Yes, when used literally, it requires a human subject (he/she/you) and a human victim. Figuratively, you might sometimes hear it describing the destruction of an idea or opportunity, but this is rare.