Ella VerbsTo hallucinate Regular AR Verb
At a glance: Alucinar (to hallucinate) is a regular -AR verb in Spanish. In the present tense: alucino, alucinas, alucina, alucinamos, alucináis, alucinan. Because it is fully regular, its endings apply directly to hundreds of other -AR verbs.
Alucinar is the Spanish verb for "to hallucinate". It is a regular AR verb. Read on below to see how it is conjugated in the 18 major Spanish tenses!
| Item | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Infinitive | alucinar | to hallucinate |
| Past participle | alucinado | hallucinated |
| Gerund | alucinando | hallucinating |
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The Indicative Present of alucinar is used to talk about situations, events or thoughts that are happening now or in the near future. It is also used to talk about facts and truths. For example, "alucino", meaning "I hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present is known as "El Presente".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucino | I hallucinate |
| Tú | alucinas | you hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucina | s/he hallucinates |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinamos | we hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucináis | you (plural) hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinan | they hallucinate |
The Indicative Preterite of alucinar is used to talk about actions completed in the past, at a specific point in time. For example, "aluciné", meaning "I hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Indicative Preterite is known as "El Pretérito Indefinido".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | aluciné | I hallucinated |
| Tú | alucinaste | you hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinó | s/he hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinamos | we hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinasteis | you (plural) hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinaron | they hallucinated |
The Indicative Imperfect of alucinar is used to describe regular and repeated actions that happened in the past and descriptions of things you used to do. For example, "alucinaba", meaning "I used to hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Indicative Imperfect is known as "El Pretérito Imperfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucinaba | I used to hallucinate |
| Tú | alucinabas | you used to hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinaba | s/he used to hallucinate |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinábamos | we used to hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinabais | you (plural) used to hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinaban | they used to hallucinate |
The Indicative Present Continuous of alucinar is used to talk about something that is happening continuously or right now. For example, "estoy alucinando", meaning "I am hallucinating".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present Continuous is known as "El Presente Progresivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | estoy alucinando | I am hallucinating |
| Tú | estás alucinando | you are hallucinating |
| Ella / Él / Usted | está alucinando | s/he is hallucinating |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | estamos alucinando | we are hallucinating |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | estáis alucinando | you (plural) are hallucinating |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | están alucinando | they are hallucinating |
The Indicative Informal Future of alucinar is used to talk about something that will happen in the future, especially in the near future. For example, "voy a alucinar", meaning "I am going to hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Indicative Informal Future is known as "El Futuro Próximo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | voy a alucinar | I am going to hallucinate |
| Tú | vas a alucinar | you are going to hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | va a alucinar | s/he is going to hallucinate |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | vamos a alucinar | we are going to hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | vais a alucinar | you (plural) are going to hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | van a alucinar | they are going to hallucinate |
The Indicative Future of alucinar is used to talk about something that will happen in the future. For example, "alucinaré", meaning "I will hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Indicative Future is known as "El Futuro Simple".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucinaré | I will hallucinate |
| Tú | alucinarás | you will hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinará | s/he will hallucinate |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinaremos | we will hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinaréis | you (plural) will hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinarán | they will hallucinate |
The Indicative Conditional of alucinar is used to talk about something that may happen in the future, hypothesis and probabilities. For example, "alucinaría", meaning "I would hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Indicative Conditional is known as "El Condicional Simple".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucinaría | I would hallucinate |
| Tú | alucinarías | you would hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinaría | s/he would hallucinate |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinaríamos | we would hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinaríais | you (plural) would hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinarían | they would hallucinate |
The Indicative Present Perfect of alucinar is used to describe actions that started recently (in the past) and are still happening now or things that have been done recently. For example, "he alucinado", meaning "I have hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | he alucinado | I have hallucinated |
| Tú | has alucinado | you have hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | ha alucinado | s/he has hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | hemos alucinado | we have hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | habéis alucinado | you (plural) have hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | han alucinado | they have hallucinated |
The Indicative Past Perfect of alucinar is used to talk about actions that happened before another action in the past. For example, "había alucinado", meaning "I had hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Indicative Past Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | había alucinado | I had hallucinated |
| Tú | habías alucinado | you had hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | había alucinado | s/he had hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | habíamos alucinado | we had hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | habíais alucinado | you (plural) had hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | habían alucinado | they had hallucinated |
The Indicative Future Perfect of alucinar is used to talk about something that will have happened in the future after something else has already happened. For example, "habré alucinado", meaning "I will have hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Indicative Future Perfect is known as "El Futuro Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | habré alucinado | I will have hallucinated |
| Tú | habrás alucinado | you will have hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | habrá alucinado | s/he will have hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | habremos alucinado | we will have hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | habréis alucinado | you (plural) will have hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | habrán alucinado | they will have hallucinated |
The Indicative Conditional Perfect of alucinar is used to talk about something that would have happened in the past but didn’t due to another action. For example, "habría alucinado", meaning "I would have hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Indicative Conditional Perfect is known as "El Condicional Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | habría alucinado | I would have hallucinated |
| Tú | habrías alucinado | you would have hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | habría alucinado | s/he would have hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | habríamos alucinado | we would have hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | habríais alucinado | you (plural) would have hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | habrían alucinado | they would have hallucinated |
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The Subjunctive Present is used to talk about situations of uncertainty, or emotions such as wishes, desires and hopes. It differs from the indicative mood due to the uncertainty of the events which are being spoken about. For example, "alucine", meaning "I hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Present is known as "El Presente de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucine | I hallucinate |
| Tú | alucines | you hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucine | s/he hallucinates |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinemos | we hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinéis | you (plural) hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinen | they hallucinate |
The Subjunctive Imperfect is used to speak about unlikely or uncertain events in the past or to cast an opinion (emotional) about something that happened in the past. For example, "alucinara", meaning "I hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Imperfect is known as "El Imperfecto Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucinara | I hallucinated |
| Tú | alucinaras | you hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinara | s/he hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucináramos | we hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinarais | you (plural) hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinaran | they hallucinated |
The Subjunctive Future is used to speak about hypothetical situations, and actions/events that may happen in the future. For example, "alucinare", meaning "I will hallucinate".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Future is known as "El Futuro de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | alucinare | I will hallucinate |
| Tú | alucinares | you will hallucinate |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucinare | s/he will hallucinate |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucináremos | we will hallucinate |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinareis | you (plural) will hallucinate |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinaren | they will hallucinate |
The Subjunctive Present Perfect is used to describe past actions or events that are still connected to the present day and to speak about an action that will have happened by a certain time in the future. For example, "haya alucinado", meaning "I have hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Present Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Perfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | haya alucinado | I have hallucinated |
| Tú | hayas alucinado | you have hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | haya alucinado | s/he has hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | hayamos alucinado | we have hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | hayáis alucinado | you (plural) have hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | hayan alucinado | they have hallucinated |
The Subjunctive Past Perfect is used to speak about hypothetical situations, and actions/events that occurred before other actions/events in the past. For example, "hubiera alucinado", meaning "I had hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Past Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | hubiera alucinado | I had hallucinated |
| Tú | hubieras alucinado | you had hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | hubiera alucinado | s/he had hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | hubiéramos alucinado | we had hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | hubierais alucinado | you (plural) had hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | hubieran alucinado | they had hallucinated |
The Subjunctive Future Perfect is used to speak about something that will have happened if a hypothetical situations occurs in the future. For example, "hubiere alucinado", meaning "I will have hallucinated".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Future Perfect is known as "El Futuro Perfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | hubiere alucinado | I will have hallucinated |
| Tú | hubieres alucinado | you will have hallucinated |
| Ella / Él / Usted | hubiere alucinado | s/he will have hallucinated |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | hubiéremos alucinado | we will have hallucinated |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | hubiereis alucinado | you (plural) will have hallucinated |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | hubieren alucinado | they will have hallucinated |
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The Imperative Affirmative is used to give orders and commands, to tell someone to do something. For example, "alucine", meaning "(to you formal) hallucinate!".
In Spanish, the Imperative Affirmative is known as "El Imperativo Afirmativo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | - | - |
| Tú | alucina | (to you) hallucinate! |
| Ella / Él / Usted | alucine | (to you formal) hallucinate! |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | alucinemos | let's hallucinate! |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | alucinad | (to you plural) hallucinate! |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | alucinen | (to you plural formal) hallucinate! |
The Imperative Negative is used to give orders and commands, telling someone not to do something. For example, "no alucine", meaning "(to you formal) don't hallucinate!".
In Spanish, the Imperative Negative is known as "El Imperativo Negativo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | - | - |
| Tú | no alucines | (to you) don't hallucinate! |
| Ella / Él / Usted | no alucine | (to you formal) don't hallucinate! |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | no alucinemos | let's not hallucinate! |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | no alucinéis | (to you plural) don't hallucinate! |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | no alucinen | (to you plural formal) don't hallucinate! |
Alucinar is a fully regular -AR verb. It follows the standard -AR conjugation pattern in every tense and mood without any stem changes, spelling changes, or irregular forms. This makes it a model verb for learning the -AR conjugation system.
In the present tense (presente), alucinar is conjugated as: yo alucino, tú alucinas, él/ella/usted alucina, nosotros alucinamos, vosotros alucináis, ellos/ellas/ustedes alucinan. The present tense is used To talk about situations, events or thoughts that are happening now or in the near future. It is also used to talk about facts and truths.
In the preterite (pretérito indefinido), alucinar is conjugated as: yo aluciné, tú alucinaste, él/ella/usted alucinó, nosotros alucinamos, vosotros alucinasteis, ellos/ellas/ustedes alucinaron. The preterite is used To talk about actions completed in the past, at a specific point in time.
In the imperfect (pretérito imperfecto), alucinar is conjugated as: yo alucinaba, tú alucinabas, él/ella/usted alucinaba, nosotros alucinábamos, vosotros alucinabais, ellos/ellas/ustedes alucinaban. The imperfect is used To describe regular and repeated actions that happened in the past and descriptions of things you used to do.
In the future tense (futuro simple), alucinar is conjugated as: yo alucinaré, tú alucinarás, él/ella/usted alucinará, nosotros alucinaremos, vosotros alucinaréis, ellos/ellas/ustedes alucinarán. The future tense is used To talk about something that will happen in the future.
In the present subjunctive (subjuntivo presente), alucinar is conjugated as: yo alucine, tú alucines, él/ella/usted alucine, nosotros alucinemos, vosotros alucinéis, ellos/ellas/ustedes alucinen. The present subjunctive is used To talk about situations of uncertainty, or emotions such as wishes, desires and hopes. It differs from the indicative mood due to the uncertainty of the events which are being spoken about.
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