Ella VerbsTo get used to Irregular Verb
At a glance: Habituarse (to get used to) is a reflexive irregular verb in Spanish. In the present tense: me habitúo, te habitúas, se habitúa, nos habituamos, os habituáis, se habitúan. Its irregularities include: Change u to ú for all but nosotras and vosotras in the indicative present (which therefore affects the subjunctive present and the imperatives).
Habituarse is the Spanish verb for "to get used to". It is an irregular reflexive verb. Read on below to see how it is conjugated in the 18 major Spanish tenses!
Similar verbs to habituarse include: aclimatarse, acondicionarse, adaptarse.
| Item | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Infinitive | habituarse | to get used to |
| Past participle | habituado | gotten used to |
| Gerund | habituando | getting used to |
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The Indicative Present of habituarse 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, "me habitúo", meaning "I get used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present is known as "El Presente".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habitúo | I get used to |
| Tú | te habitúas | you get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habitúa | s/he gets used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituamos | we get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituáis | you (plural) get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habitúan | they get used to |
The red dot () above denotes an irregular conjugation.
The Indicative Preterite of habituarse is used to talk about actions completed in the past, at a specific point in time. For example, "me habitué", meaning "I got used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Preterite is known as "El Pretérito Indefinido".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habitué | I got used to |
| Tú | te habituaste | you got used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituó | s/he got used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituamos | we got used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituasteis | you (plural) got used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituaron | they got used to |
The Indicative Imperfect of habituarse is used to describe regular and repeated actions that happened in the past and descriptions of things you used to do. For example, "me habituaba", meaning "I used to get used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Imperfect is known as "El Pretérito Imperfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habituaba | I used to get used to |
| Tú | te habituabas | you used to get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituaba | s/he used to get used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituábamos | we used to get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituabais | you (plural) used to get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituaban | they used to get used to |
The Indicative Present Continuous of habituarse is used to talk about something that is happening continuously or right now. For example, "me estoy habituando", meaning "I am getting used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present Continuous is known as "El Presente Progresivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me estoy habituando | I am getting used to |
| Tú | te estás habituando | you are getting used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se está habituando | s/he is getting used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos estamos habituando | we are getting used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os estáis habituando | you (plural) are getting used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se están habituando | they are getting used to |
The Indicative Informal Future of habituarse is used to talk about something that will happen in the future, especially in the near future. For example, "me voy a habituar", meaning "I am going to get used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Informal Future is known as "El Futuro Próximo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me voy a habituar | I am going to get used to |
| Tú | te vas a habituar | you are going to get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se va a habituar | s/he is going to get used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos vamos a habituar | we are going to get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os vais a habituar | you (plural) are going to get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se van a habituar | they are going to get used to |
The Indicative Future of habituarse is used to talk about something that will happen in the future. For example, "me habituaré", meaning "I will get used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Future is known as "El Futuro Simple".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habituaré | I will get used to |
| Tú | te habituarás | you will get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituará | s/he will get used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituaremos | we will get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituaréis | you (plural) will get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituarán | they will get used to |
The Indicative Conditional of habituarse is used to talk about something that may happen in the future, hypothesis and probabilities. For example, "me habituaría", meaning "I would get used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Conditional is known as "El Condicional Simple".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habituaría | I would get used to |
| Tú | te habituarías | you would get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituaría | s/he would get used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituaríamos | we would get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituaríais | you (plural) would get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituarían | they would get used to |
The Indicative Present Perfect of habituarse 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, "me he habituado", meaning "I have gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Present Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me he habituado | I have gotten used to |
| Tú | te has habituado | you have gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se ha habituado | s/he has gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos hemos habituado | we have gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habéis habituado | you (plural) have gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se han habituado | they have gotten used to |
The Indicative Past Perfect of habituarse is used to talk about actions that happened before another action in the past. For example, "me había habituado", meaning "I had gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Past Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me había habituado | I had gotten used to |
| Tú | te habías habituado | you had gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se había habituado | s/he had gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habíamos habituado | we had gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habíais habituado | you (plural) had gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habían habituado | they had gotten used to |
The Indicative Future Perfect of habituarse is used to talk about something that will have happened in the future after something else has already happened. For example, "me habré habituado", meaning "I will have gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Future Perfect is known as "El Futuro Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habré habituado | I will have gotten used to |
| Tú | te habrás habituado | you will have gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habrá habituado | s/he will have gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habremos habituado | we will have gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habréis habituado | you (plural) will have gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habrán habituado | they will have gotten used to |
The Indicative Conditional Perfect of habituarse is used to talk about something that would have happened in the past but didn’t due to another action. For example, "me habría habituado", meaning "I would have gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Indicative Conditional Perfect is known as "El Condicional Perfecto".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habría habituado | I would have gotten used to |
| Tú | te habrías habituado | you would have gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habría habituado | s/he would have gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habríamos habituado | we would have gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habríais habituado | you (plural) would have gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habrían habituado | they would have gotten used to |
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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, "me habitúe", meaning "I get used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Present is known as "El Presente de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habitúe | I get used to |
| Tú | te habitúes | you get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habitúe | s/he gets used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituemos | we get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituéis | you (plural) get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habitúen | they get used to |
The red dot () above denotes an irregular conjugation.
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, "me habituara", meaning "I got used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Imperfect is known as "El Imperfecto Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habituara | I got used to |
| Tú | te habituaras | you got used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituara | s/he got used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituáramos | we got used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituarais | you (plural) got used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituaran | they got used to |
The Subjunctive Future is used to speak about hypothetical situations, and actions/events that may happen in the future. For example, "me habituare", meaning "I will get used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Future is known as "El Futuro de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me habituare | I will get used to |
| Tú | te habituares | you will get used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se habituare | s/he will get used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos habituáremos | we will get used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os habituareis | you (plural) will get used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se habituaren | they will get used to |
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, "me haya habituado", meaning "I have gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Present Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Perfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me haya habituado | I have gotten used to |
| Tú | te hayas habituado | you have gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se haya habituado | s/he has gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos hayamos habituado | we have gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os hayáis habituado | you (plural) have gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se hayan habituado | they have gotten used to |
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, "me hubiera habituado", meaning "I had gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Past Perfect is known as "El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me hubiera habituado | I had gotten used to |
| Tú | te hubieras habituado | you had gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se hubiera habituado | s/he had gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos hubiéramos habituado | we had gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os hubierais habituado | you (plural) had gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se hubieran habituado | they had gotten used to |
The Subjunctive Future Perfect is used to speak about something that will have happened if a hypothetical situations occurs in the future. For example, "me hubiere habituado", meaning "I will have gotten used to".
In Spanish, the Subjunctive Future Perfect is known as "El Futuro Perfecto de Subjuntivo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | me hubiere habituado | I will have gotten used to |
| Tú | te hubieres habituado | you will have gotten used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | se hubiere habituado | s/he will have gotten used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | nos hubiéremos habituado | we will have gotten used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | os hubiereis habituado | you (plural) will have gotten used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | se hubieren habituado | they will have gotten used to |
Practice conjugation in a way that makes you think, not just memorize. Our Spanish Verb Sudoku has a new puzzle every day, plus free printable PDF worksheets with answer keys.
It includes the most detailed verb tables (with full English translation) for Habituarse and 2,300+ other verbs.
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The Imperative Affirmative is used to give orders and commands, to tell someone to do something. For example, "habitúese", meaning "(to you formal) get! used to".
In Spanish, the Imperative Affirmative is known as "El Imperativo Afirmativo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | - | - |
| Tú | habitúate | (to you) get! used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | habitúese | (to you formal) get! used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | habituémonos | let's get! used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | habituaos | (to you plural) get! used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | habitúense | (to you plural formal) get! used to |
The red dot () above denotes an irregular conjugation.
The Imperative Negative is used to give orders and commands, telling someone not to do something. For example, "no se habitúe", meaning "(to you formal) don't get! used to".
In Spanish, the Imperative Negative is known as "El Imperativo Negativo".
| Pronoun | Spanish | English |
|---|---|---|
| Yo | - | - |
| Tú | no te habitúes | (to you) don't get! used to |
| Ella / Él / Usted | no se habitúe | (to you formal) don't get! used to |
| Nosotras / Nosotros | no nos habituemos | let's not get! used to |
| Vosotras / Vosotros | no os habituéis | (to you plural) don't get! used to |
| Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes | no se habitúen | (to you plural formal) don't get! used to |
The red dot () above denotes an irregular conjugation.
Habituarse is an irregular Spanish verb. Its irregularities include: Change u to ú for all but nosotras and vosotras in the indicative present (which therefore affects the subjunctive present and the imperatives).
In the present tense (presente), habituarse is conjugated as: yo me habitúo, tú te habitúas, él/ella/usted se habitúa, nosotros nos habituamos, vosotros os habituáis, ellos/ellas/ustedes se habitúan. 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), habituarse is conjugated as: yo me habitué, tú te habituaste, él/ella/usted se habituó, nosotros nos habituamos, vosotros os habituasteis, ellos/ellas/ustedes se habituaron. The preterite is used To talk about actions completed in the past, at a specific point in time.
In the imperfect (pretérito imperfecto), habituarse is conjugated as: yo me habituaba, tú te habituabas, él/ella/usted se habituaba, nosotros nos habituábamos, vosotros os habituabais, ellos/ellas/ustedes se habituaban. 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), habituarse is conjugated as: yo me habituaré, tú te habituarás, él/ella/usted se habituará, nosotros nos habituaremos, vosotros os habituaréis, ellos/ellas/ustedes se habituarán. The future tense is used To talk about something that will happen in the future.
In the present subjunctive (subjuntivo presente), habituarse is conjugated as: yo me habitúe, tú te habitúes, él/ella/usted se habitúe, nosotros nos habituemos, vosotros os habituéis, ellos/ellas/ustedes se habitúen. 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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