How to conjugate charlar in Spanish

charlar in Spanish means to talk, 

charlar is a regular verb. That means this verb does follow the traditional conjugation patterns in all verb tenses. 

Let’s learn how to conjugate the verb charlar so you can use it comfortably in all tenses. 

charlar in the Present Tense

The present tense is used to talk about actions or events happening now. 

The verb charlar is regular in the present tense. 

The verb charlar is what we call an -ar verb. -ar verbs are verbs that end in -ar. Regular -ar verbs are conjugated by following 2 major rules. 

  1. Take off the -ar
  2. Replace with a new ending depending on who performs the action. 

To review -ar verbs watch my -ar verbs video: 

Just in case you need to review conjugation of -er and -ir verbs, Click for Page

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the indicative present tense:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharloI talk
charlasyou talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlahe/she talkes, you (formal) talkes
Nosotros (as)charlamoswe talk
Vosotros (as)charlaísyou (plural) Spain talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlanthey talk, you (plural) talk

charlar in the Preterite Tense

The preterite is used to talk about actions that have already been completed. These actions have a clear beginning or ending. The preterite tense is often used with phrases that give a specific time frame.  More on the Preterite Tense Here

Things to remember: 

  1. The preterite is NOT used to describe actions or events that are repeated or continuous in the past. That means that those actions do not have a clear beginning or end. 
  2. The preterite is NOT used to describe people in the past.

The verb charlar is Regular in the preterite. That means it does follow the pattern of regular -ar verbs in the preterite. To review -ar verbs watch my -ar verbs video:  https://youtu.be/Pi5rlDOeOnM 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the preterite tense:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharléI talked
charlasteyou talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlóhe/she talked, you (formal) talked
Nosotros (as)charlamoswe talked
Vosotros (as)charlasteisyou (plural) Spain talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlaronthey talked, you (plural) talked

Below are some expressions that are often used when using the preterite:

la semana pasadalast week
el mes pasadolast month
el fin de semana pasadolast weekend
el año pasadolast year
ayer yesterday 
anteayerthe day before yesterday
anoche last night

charlar in the Imperfect Tense

The imperfect is a form of past tense. It is primarily used to talk about continuous, repeated, usual or habitual actions in the past. It can also be used to talk about what someone or something was like in the past, what someone used to be or used to do. The imperfect is used when actions don’t have a specific beginning or end. 

The verb charlar is regular in the imperfect tense. 

The verb charlar is what we call an -ar verb. -ar verbs are verbs that end in -ar. Regular -ar verbs are conjugated by following 2 major rules. 

  1. Take off the -ar
  2. Replace with a new ending depending on who performs the action. 

To review how to conjugate -ar verbs in the imperfect watch my video: Click for Video 

To review how to conjugate -er and -ir verbs in the imperfect watch my video: Click for Video 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the imperfect tense:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlabaI used to talk
charlabasyou used to talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlabahe/she used to talk, you (formal) used to talk
Nosotros (as)charlábamoswe used to talk
Vosotros (as)charlabaisyou (plural) Spain used to talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlabanthey used to talk, you (plural) used to talk

Below are some expressions that are often used when using the Imperfect:

a menudooften
usualmenteusually
todos los díasevery day
todos los mesesevery month
todos los añosevery year
casi siemprealmost always
a vecessometimes
de niño/niñaas a child …
siempre always
normalmente normally

charlar in the Future Tense

The future is used to talk about an action or event that will happen in the future. 

The verb charlar is regular in the future tense. 

To form the future tense of regular -ar, -er and -ir verbs add the following endings to the verb in the infinitive (verbs that have not been conjugated and end in -ar, -er, -ir). The verb charlar is in its purest form (it has not been conjugated) it’s in the infinitive.  

The verb charlar is what we call an -ar verb. -ar verbs are verbs that end in -ar. To conjugate charlar in the future, follow these two rules: 

  1. Find the infinitive of the verb (verbs that have not been conjugated and end in -ar, -er, -ir). In this case charlar.
  2. Then attach the ending to the end of the infinitive. The ending depends on who is performing the action. 
Yoé
ás
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) á
Nosotros (as)emos
Vosotros (as)éis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)án

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar using the future tense:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlaréI will talk
charlarásyou will talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlaráhe/she will talk, you (formal) will talk
Nosotros (as)charlaremoswe will talk
Vosotros (as)charlaréisyou (plural) Spain will talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlaránthey will talk, you (plural) will talk

charlar in the Informal Future Tense

The informal future is used to talk about an action or event that is going to take place in the near future. To form the informal future, you must use the correct form of the verb ir (to go) + a + the verb in the infinitive. 

The verb charlar is regular in the informal future tense. 

Follow this rule:

  1. Ir (conjugated) + a + infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir and has not been conjugated).  Example : Yo voy a charlar 

The conjugation of the verb ir (to go) in the present tense are:

Yovoy
vas
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) va
Nosotros (as)vamos
Vosotros (as)vais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)van

To review how to conjugate the informal future watch my video: Click for Video 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar using the informal future:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yovoy a charlarI will talk
vas a charlaryou will talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)va a charlarhe/she will talk, you (formal) will talk
Nosotros (as)vamos a charlarwe will talk
Vosotros (as)vais a charlaryou (plural) Spain will talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)van a charlarthey will talk, you (plural) will talk

charlar in the Present Progressive Tense.

The present progressive is used to talk about actions or events happening now. In other words, we use the present progressive to talk about actions that are in the process of happening at the current moment. 

The verb charlar is regular in the present progressive tense. 

The present progressive is formed by using the correct form of the verb estar (to be) plus the present participle (-ing form of a verb). 

To form the present participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ando for -ar verbs
  4. Add -iendo for -er and –ir verbs

The conjugations of the verb estar in the present tense are:

Yoestoy
estás
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) está
Nosotros (as)estamos
Vosotros (as)estáis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)están

The present participle of the verb charlar is: charlando

To review the present progressive and present participles in Spanish, watch my Present Progressive Video:Click for Video 

Just in case you need to review the verb estar, watch my Estar video: Click for Video 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar using the present progressive:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yoestoy charlandoI am talking
estás charlandoyou are talking
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)está charlandohe/she is talking, you (formal) are talking
Nosotros (as)estamos charlandowe are talking
Vosotros (as)estáis charlandoyou (plural) Spain are talking
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)están charlandothey are talking, you (plural) are talking

charlar in the Conditional Tense

The conditional tense is used to talk about actions or events that may happen in the future. Think of it as a possibility, a hypothesis, a probability. 

The verb charlar is regular in the conditional tense. 

The verb charlar is what we call an -ar verb. -ar verbs are verbs that end in -ar. To conjugate charlar in the conditional tense follow these two rules: 

  1. Find the infinitive of the verb (verbs that have not been conjugated and end in -ar, -er, -ir). In this case charlar.
  2. Then attach the ending to the end of the infinitive. The ending depends on who is performing the action. 

To form the conditional of a verb add the following endings to the infinitive of the verb: 

Yoía
ías
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) ía
Nosotros (as)íamos
Vosotros (as)íais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)ían

The infinitive of the verb charlar is charlar

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar using the conditional tense:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlaríaI would talk
charlaríasyou would talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlaríahe/she would talk, you (formal) would talk
Nosotros (as)charlaríamoswe would talk
Vosotros (as)charlaríasyou (plural) Spain would talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlaríanthey would talk, you (plural)would talk

charlar in the Present Perfect Tense

The present perfect is used to talk about actions or events that have started recently (in the past) and are still happening. It can also be used to talk about things that have been done recently or to describe experiences a person has had in their lives. 

The verb charlar is regular in the conditional tense. 

To form the present perfect tense, you must use the helping verb “haber” in the present tense. This will let us know who has performed the action. Then, we add the past participle of the verb. 

The conjugations of haber in the present tense are:

Yohe
has
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) ha
Nosotros (as)hemos
Vosotros (as)habéis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)han

To form the past participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs
  4. Add -ido for -er and –ir verbs

To summarize. Correct form of haber in the present + past participle = present perfect. 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the present perfect:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohe charladoI have talked
has charladoyou have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)ha charladohe/she have talked, you (formal) have talked
Nosotros (as)hemos charladowe have talked
Vosotros (as)habéis charladoyou (plural) Spain have talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)han charladothey have talked, you (plural) have talked

charlar in the Past Perfect Tense (Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto) 

The past perfect is used to talk about actions or events that happened before. It is widely used to describe a series of events and it comes in handy to tell stories. 

The verb charlar is regular in the past perfect tense. 

To form the past perfect you must use the verb haber in the imperfect. This will let us know who has performed the action. 

The conjugations of haber in the imperfect tense are:

Yohabía
habías
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) había
Nosotros (as)habíamos
Vosotros (as)habíais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habían

Then, we add the past participle of the verb. In this case charlar

To form the past participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs
  4. Add -ido for -er and –ir verbs

To summarize. Use the correct form of haber in the imperfect + past participle = past perfect. 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the past perfect:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohabía charladoI had talked
habías charladoyou had talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)había charladohe/she had talked, you (formal) had talked
Nosotros (as)habíamos charladowe had talked
Vosotros (as)habíais charladoyou (plural) Spain had talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habíain charladothey had talked, you (plural) had talked

charlar in the Future Perfect Tense

The future perfect is used to talk about something that hasn’t happened yet but is predicted to take place. It is used to describe what will have happened in the future.

The verb charlar is regular in the future perfect tense. 

To form the future perfect you must use the verb haber in the simple future tense. This will let us know who has performed the action. 

The conjugations of haber in the future tense are:

Yohabré
habrás
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) habrá
Nosotros (as)habremos
Vosotros (as)habréis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habrán

Then, we add the past participle of the verb. In this case charlar. To form the past participle, you simply add the appropriate ending to the stem of the verb. 

To form the past participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs
  4. Add -ido for -er and –ir verbs

To summarize. Correct form of haber in the simple future tense + past participle = future perfect. 

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the future perfect:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohabré charladoI will have talked
habrás charladoyou will have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)habrá charladohe/she will have talked, you (formal) will have talked
Nosotros (as)habremos charladowe will have talked
Vosotros (as)habréis charladoyou (plural) Spain will have talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habrán charladothey will have talked, you (plural) will have talked

charlar in the Conditional Perfect Tense

The conditional perfect is used to talk about an action or event that would have happened in the past but didn’t take place due to another action happening. It is used to express possibility in the past. Basically think of it as actions that could or would have taken place if … 

The verb charlar is regular in the conditional perfect tense. 

To form the conditional perfect you must use the verb haber in the conditional. This will let us know who has performed the action.

The conjugations of haber in the conditional tense are:

Yohabría
habrías
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) habría
Nosotros (as)habríamos
Vosotros (as)habríais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habrían

 Then, we add the past participle of the verb. In this case charlar. To form the past participle, you simply add the appropriate ending to the stem of the verb. 

To form the past participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs
  4. Add -ido for -er and –ir verbs

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the conditional perfect:

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohabría charladoI would have talked
habrías charladoyou would have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)habría charladohe/she would have talked, you (formal) would have talked
Nosotros (as)habríamos charladowe would have talked
Vosotros (as)habríais charladoyou (plural) Spain will would talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)habrían charladothey would have talked, you (plural) would have talked

charlar in the Subjunctive Present Tense

The Subjunctive present is used to talk about situations of uncertainty. For example emotions such as wishes, desires and hopes. The main difference between the subjunctive and the indicative mode is that the subjunctive is uncertain, hypothetical or not real. 

The verb charlar is Regular in the subjunctive present form. 

To form the subjunctive present of most verbs, you must take off the -o endings of the yo form of the present simple and then add a new ending based on who is performing the action.

Subjunctive present endings for -ar:

Yoe
es
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) e
Nosotros (as)emos
Vosotros (as)éis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)en

Subjunctive present endings for -er and -ir verbs: 

Yoa
as
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) as
Nosotros (as)amos
Vosotros (as)áis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)an

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the subjunctive present:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharleI may talk
charlesyou may talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlehe/she may talk, you (formal) may talk
Nosotros (as)charlemoswe may talk
Vosotros (as)charléisyou (plural) Spain may talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlenthey may talk, you (plural) may talk

charlar in the Subjunctive Imperfect Tense

The subjunctive imperfect is used to talk about situations of uncertainty in the past. For example emotions such as wishes, desires and hopes in the past. It is also used to express politeness or deference, primarily when making a request. 

The verb charlar is regular in the subjunctive imperfect tense. 

To form the subjunctive imperfect find the ellos/ellas form of the verb in the preterite, take off -aron or -ieron and add a new ending. 

Subjunctive Imperfect endings for -ar verbs like charlar the endings are:

Yoara
aras
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) ara
Nosotros (as)áramos
Vosotros (as)arais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)aran

You can also use the endings below as alternative endings and the meaning doesn’t change. Keep in mind the ones above are more common

Yoase
ases
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) ase
Nosotros (as)ásemos
Vosotros (as)aseis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)asen

Subjunctive Imperfect endings for -er & -ir verbs like he endings are:

Yoiera
ieras
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) iera
Nosotros (as)iéramos
Vosotros (as)ierais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)ieran

You can also use the endings below as alternative endings and the meaning doesn’t change. Keep in mind the ones above are more common:

Yoiese
ieses
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) iese
Nosotros (as)iésemos
Vosotros (as)ieseis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)iesen

Here are the steps in action:

  1. charlar
  1. The third person of the preterite (ellos/ellas) would be: charlar – charlaron
  1. Now remove -aron and you are left with charl
  1. Then, add a new ending.

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the subjunctive imperfect:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlaraI might talk
charlarasyou might talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlarahe/she might talk, you (formal) might talk
Nosotros (as)charláramoswe might talk
Vosotros (as)charlaraisyou (plural) Spain might talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlaranthey might talk, you (plural) might talk

OR

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlaseI might talk
charlasesyou might talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlasehe/she might talk, you (formal) might talk
Nosotros (as)charlásamoswe might talk
Vosotros (as)charlasaisyou (plural) Spain might talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlasanthey might talk, you (plural) might talk

charlar in the Subjunctive Future Tense

The subjunctive future is used to describe an event or action or a possible or hypothetical situation. It can also be used to describe something you wished or hoped would happen in the future. This tense is rarely used in Spanish but it doesn’t hurt to learn it.

The verb charlar is regular in the subjunctive future tense. 

To form the future subjunctive simply add the following endings to the verb in the infinitive (the most pure form of the verb. Verbs in the infinitive have not been conjugated (they end in -ar, -er & -ir)).

Subjunctive Future endings for -ar verbs like charlar the endings are:

Yoe
es
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) e
Nosotros (as)emos (accent on á of the stem)
Vosotros (as)eis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)en

Subjunctive Future endings for -er verbs the endings are:

Yoiere
ieres
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) iere
Nosotros (as)iéremos
Vosotros (as)iereis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)ieran

Subjunctive Future endings for -ir verbs the endings are:

Yoiere
ieres
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) iere
Nosotros (as)iéremos
Vosotros (as)iereis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)ieren

Below you will find the conjugations of the verb charlar in the subjunctive future:

PronounSpanishEnglish
YocharlaraI will talk
charlarasyou will talk
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)charlarahe/she will talk, you (formal) will talk
Nosotros (as)charláramoswe will talk
Vosotros (as)charlaraisyou (plural) Spain will talk
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)charlaranthey will talk, you (plural) will talk

charlar in the Subjunctive Present Perfect Tense

The subjunctive present perfect is used to describe actions that are connected to the present. It is also used to talk about actions that will have happened by a certain time in the future. 

The verb charlar is regular in the subjunctive present perfect tense. 

To form the subjunctive present perfect you must use the present subjunctive of the verb haber  + the past participle of the verb

Here are the conjugations of the verb haber in the present subjunctive:

Yohaya
hayas
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) haya
Nosotros (as)hayamos
Vosotros (as)hayáis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hayan

The past participle of the verb charlar is: charlado

Now, let’s put it together . Here are the conjugations of the verb charlar in the subjunctive present perfect. 

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohaya charladoI may have talked
hayas charladoyou may have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)haya charladohe/she may have talked, you (formal) may have talked
Nosotros (as)hayamos charladowe may have talked
Vosotros (as)hayáis charladoyou (plural) Spain may have talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hayan charladothey may have talked, you (plural) may have talked

charlar in the Subjunctive Past Perfect Tense (Pluscuamperfecto del Subjuntivo)

The subjunctive past perfect is used to talk about hypothetical situations or actions in the past. It can also be used to talk about past actions that preceded other past actions. 

The verb charlar is regular in the subjunctive past perfect tense. 

To form the subjunctive past perfect you must use the imperfect subjunctive of the verb haber  + the past participle of the verb

The imperfect subjunctive of haber can be conjugated in two different ways. Having said that, the first conjugations are more commonly used. 

Here are the conjugations of the verb haber in the imperfect subjunctive of the verb haber:

Yohubiera
hubieras
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) hubiera
Nosotros (as)hubiéramos
Vosotros (as)hubierais
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hubieran

The other conjugations of haber in the imperfect subjunctive are:

Yohubiese
hubieses
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.) hubiese
Nosotros (as)hubiésemos
Vosotros (as)hubieseis
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hubiesen

To form the past participle of a verb:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir).
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs
  4. Add -ido for -er and –ir verbs

Let’s apply it to charlar:

  1. Find the verb in the infinitive (verb that ends in -ar, -er, -ir)  = (charlar)
  2. Remove the ending (-ar, -er, -ir) = (charl)
  3. Add -ado for -ar verbs  = (charlado)

The past participle of the verb charlar is charlado.

Now, let’s put it together . Here are the conjugations of the verb charlar in the subjunctive past perfect. 

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohubiese charladoI might have talked
hubieses charladoyou might have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)hubiese charladohe/she might have talked, you (formal) might have talked
Nosotros (as)hubiésemos charladowe might have talked
Vosotros (as)hubieseis charladoyou (plural) Spain might have talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hubiesen charladothey might have talked, you (plural) might have talked

OR

PronounSpanishEnglish
Yohubiera charladoI might have talked
hubieras charladoyou might have talked
Él / Ella / Usted (Ud.)hubiera charladohe/she might have talked, you (formal) might have talked
Nosotros (as)hubiéramos charladowe might have talked
Vosotros (as)hubierais charladoyou (plural) Spain might have talked
Ellas / Ellos / Ustedes (Uds.)hubieran charladothey might have talked, you (plural) might have talked

charlar as an Imperative Affirmative Command

The imperative Affirmative commands are used to tell someone or a group of people what to do. We do not give commands in the 1st or 3rd person which is why yo, él, ella, ellos, and ellas have been removed for this tense.

charlar is Regular when forming Imperative Affirmative Commands. 

Mostly we will give commands or tell someone we treat as (tú) what to do. Let’s learn how to conjugate that part first. 

To find the Affirmative Informal tú command of a verb follow these steps:

  1. Find the form of the verb in the present tense. 
  2. Take off the “s
  3. That will give you the affirmative informal command of a verb in the tú form. 

Reminders: Stem changing verbs should continue to have the change in the stem.

For example, The affirmative informal tú command of the verb charlar  would be charla

Let’s see the process:

  1. Find the tú form of the verb in the present tense.  (charlas)
  2. Take off the “s”.  (charla)
  3. That will give you the affirmative informal command of a verb in the tú form.  (charla)

To review how to use Affirmative informal (tú) commands watch my video: Click for Video 

PronounSpanishEnglish
N/AN/AN/A
¡charla!talk!
Usted (Ud.)¡charle!talk!
Nosotros (as)¡charlemos!talk!
Vosotros (as)¡charlad!talk!
Ustedes (Uds.)¡charlen!talk!

charlar as an Imperative Negative Command

The imperative Negative commands are used to tell someone or a group of people what NOT to do. We do not give commands in the 1st or 3rd person which is why yo, él, ella, ellos, and ellas have been removed for this tense.

charlar is Regular when forming Imperative Negative Commands. 

Mostly we will give commands or tell someone we treat as (tú) what to do. Let’s learn how to conjugate that part first. 

To find the Negative Informal tú command of a regular verb follow these steps:

  1. Start with No
  2. Find the yo form of the verb in the present tense. 
  3. Take off the “o
  4. Add -es if it’s an -ar verb or -as if it’s and -er or -ir verb.

To review how to use Negative informal (tú) commands watch my video: Click for Video 

PronounSpanishEnglish
N/AN/AN/A
¡no charles!Don’t talk!
Usted (Ud.)¡no charle!Don’t talk!
Nosotros (as)¡no charlemos!Don’t talk!
Vosotros (as)¡no charléis!Don’t talk!
Ustedes (Uds.)¡no charlen!Don’t talk!

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