Stem-Changing Verbs in the Present Tense
Spanish grammar is wonderfully logical; even the occasional exception to the rules follows a general pattern. Case in point: stem-changing (also known as radical-changing) verbs.
In order to understand this concept, it is first necessary to define “stem.” The stem of the verb is the root, the part that, unlike the ending, does not change when the verb is conjugated. It is the part of the infinitive that stays when the –ar, -er or –ir ending is changed. In the verb hablar (to speak/talk), habl- is the stem:
yo hablo (I speak) nostros hablamos (we speak)
tú hablas (you speak)
él habla (he speaks) ellos hablan (they speak)
Hablar is a regular –ar verb, and so the stem does not change. Watch what happens to the stem-changing –ar verb jugar (to play (a game, a sport)):
yo juego (I play) nosotros jugamos (we play)
tú juegas (you play)
él juega (he plays) ellos juegan (they play)
Here’s another stem-changing –ar verb, cerrar (to close):
yo cierro (I close) nosotros cerramos (we close)
tú cierras (you close)
él cierra (he closes) ellos cierran (they close)
In the case of jugar, the u in the stem became ue in four of the conjugations (the yo, tú, él and ellos forms). In the case of cerrar, the e became ie in the same four conjugations. The third type of stem change is o to ue. I’ll bet you can predict what happens to the stem-changing verb recordar (to remember/recall, or record):
yo recuerdo (I remember) nosotros recordamos (we remember)
tú recuerdas (you remember)
él recuerda (he remembers) ellos recuerdan (they remember)
The tricky part about stem-changing verbs is that there are two parts of the verb to conjugate: the ending and the middle, or stem. Fortunately, most stem-changing verbs are quite predictable; the –ar, -er and –ir endings remain the same as in any regular verb, and only the stem changes in all but the nosotros and vosotros forms. (In Latin America, vosotros is not widely used, but you’ll still run into it in written language, including the Bible.) There are, as we have seen, three main stem changes. Here are some verbs that follow the patterns we’ve seen so far:
e to ie stem change
cerrar to close
comenzar to start, begin
despertar to awaken
defender to defend
entender to understand
empezar to start, begin
mentir to lie
negar to deny
pensar to think
perder to lose
preferir to prefer
querer to want
**tener to have
**venir to come
**These two have irregular yo forms: yo tengo, yo vengo. The other forms follow the rules for the regular e to ie stem change.
o to ue stem change
acordar to remember
almorzar to have lunch
contar to count, to tell
costar to cost
devolver to return, give back
dormir to sleep
encontrar to meet, find
envolver to wrap, envelop
morir to die
mostrar to show
mover to move
poder to be able (to do something)
probar to prove, to try
recordar to remember
volver to return, come back
Practice
Let’s try it. Fill in the blanks with the correct form of the verb in parentheses—then, translate the sentences to English. Answers at the bottom:
1) Yo ____________________ hambre. ¿Tú ___________________ comer? (tener, querer)
2) Sí. ¿Qué restaurante _____________________ tú? (preferir)
3) Mi hermano _________________________ en Pollo Loco muchas veces. (almorzar)
4) Ah, sí, yo __________________________ que le gusta allí. Está bien. (recordar)
5) Está bueno, y la comida no ______________________ mucho. Pero primero vamos a la biblioteca. (costar)
6) ¿ ___________________________ (tú) un libro? (devolver)
7) Sí, ahora misma. Después nosotros __________________________ a comer. (empezar)
8) ¡Antes que yo _________________________ de hambre! (morir)
Answers:
1) tengo, quieres. I’m hungry. Do you want to eat?
2) prefieres. Yes. What restaurant do you prefer?
3) almuerza. My brother often has lunch at Pollo Loco.
4) recuerdo. Oh yes, I remember that he likes it there. Okay.
5) cuesta. It’s good, and the food doesn’t cost much. But first let’s go to the library.
6) Devuelves. Are you returning a book?
7) empezamos. Yes, right now. Then we can start to eat.
8) muero. Before I die of hunger!
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