A LanguagePosters.com original, designed by students for students. The 100 Most Used Spanish Verbs Poster & Study Guide is a must have for anyone who wants to learn Spanish!
Also available in: 🇪🇸Spanish (Past Tense), 🇫🇷French, 🇮🇹Italian, 🇵🇹🇧🇷Portuguese, 🇩🇪German, 🇬🇧🇺🇸English, 🇨🇳🇹🇼Mandarin Chinese, and Catalan.
Want to start SPEAKING Spanish quickly? Check out our newest poster: How to Eat, Play, and Live in Spanish!
Why the 100 Most Used Verbs?
Verbs are used to describe actions and things that happen. Learning the most commonly used verbs is the key to speaking any language. With little more than the words on this poster, you could carry on a conversation in Spanish for hours!
As Seen In
"The best way to teach yourself a new language fast, from 6 people who've done it"
Size & Specifications
50cm x 70cm, roughly 20" x 28".
Posters are printed on high-quality 170g/m² paper with semi gloss coating. Perfect for framing or mounting directly on a wall.
Features
- A selection of the most used irregular and regular Spanish verb conjugations in the present tense. See the full list of the 100 Most Used Spanish Verbs.
- Irregular verbs are arranged to make learning and memorization as easy as possible, grouped both by meaning and pattern of conjugation.
- AR, ER, and IR regular Spanish verb conjugation key
- Highlighted irregular Spanish verb forms
- The past participle (have done) and present participle (doing) forms of each verb.
- 5 Spanish verb conjugations typically used reflexively
- 5 Spanish verb conjugations typically used in the 3rd person (like Gustar)
- English translations
What's Included
- The 100 Most Used Spanish Verbs Poster.
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Pocket Dictionary* - Bring the 100 Most Used Spanish Verbs with you everywhere you go! The same information as the poster in a portable size to carry with you.
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Crossword Puzzle Book* - Test your knowledge with original crossword puzzles! Fill in the blank spaces from memory or use the poster and pocket dictionary as a reference.
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"Magic" Verb-Decoder Paper Glasses cause all the IRREGULAR verb forms to disappear before your very eyes! Allowing you to test your knowledge and to help you remember which forms are regular and which are irregular!
* Printed copies included for UK customers. PDF digital download links provided to all customers immediately after purchase.
Shipping and Delivery
Orders are shipped from our fulfillment centers in the USA, UK, and mainland Europe (Spain), based on the destination country.
Orders are typically shipped within 1 business day. Orders placed before 10am are typically shipped the same working day.
How it Works
One of the most difficult parts of learning Spanish, especially for native English speakers, is remembering how to conjugate different verbs. In English in the present tense, most verbs don't change too much when the subject of a sentence changes, usually we just add a "s" to the end when the subject is he/she/it. For example, I speak, you speak, he/she speaks, we speak, they speak. In Spanish (and the other romance languages), however, the verbs change a lot. Here's the same example in Spanish: yo hablo, tu hablas, el/ella habla, nosotros hablamos, vosotros habláis, ellos/ellas hablan. Note how the underlined portions of each word change with each subject. This is called conjugation.
In Spanish, verbs are called either regular or irregular depending on whether they follow a standard pattern for conjugation. Regular verbs follow one of 3 patterns. Irregular verbs are called irregular because they do NOT follow a standard pattern for conjugation. This makes remembering them a pain!
(The 3 patters of regular verb conjugations, -AR, -ER, and -IR)
On this poster, you'll find the full, present tense conjugations of 41 of the most used irregular verbs. For every verb, the forms of the verb which are irregular are highlighted in red. You'll also find 49 of the most used regular verbs, including a key to each of the 3 standard patterns for conjugating them. We've also included 5 more irregular verbs which are typically used reflexively (as in English, when we do something to ourselves. E.g. To dress). Finally, you'll find 5 more full, present tense conjugations for verbs which are typically used in the 3rd person. For example, in Spanish, you don't say "I like it" but rather "A mi, me gusta" (to me, it pleases me).
Along with each Spanish verb, you'll also find the English translation and the participio, which combines with the Spanish verb Haber to form the past perfect tense (used to describe an experience or something from the recent past, for example "I have seen the movie" or "I have eaten dinner"). Finally, you'll find the gerundio used to describe actions in progress (E.g. "I am eating," or "we are playing").
Finally, the verbs on this poster are arranged to make remembering them as easy as possible. Many irregular verbs still follow the same or similar patterns. Verbs that follow similar patterns are placed together on the poster.