Spanish 101 · Verb conjugation

Conjugate oír

to hear · ir-verb

Using this verb

This verb belongs to the ir-verb family in the charts below. Use the present for habits and facts, the preterite for completed events in the past, and the imperfect for ongoing or repeated past situations — your instructor’s examples win if they differ slightly.

Listen for oír in class and in audio: match the ending to the subject pronoun you hear or read, then check your agreement (singular/plural, person).

Yo oo todos los días.I hear every day. (present habit)

Ayer yo oí.Yesterday I did — preterite for a completed moment.

Conjugation tables

Presente
yooo
oes
él/ellaoe
nosotrosoimos
vosotrosoís
ellos/ellasoen
Pretérito
yo
oiste
él/ellaoió
nosotrosoimos
vosotrosoisteis
ellos/ellasoieron
Imperfecto
yooía
oías
él/ellaoía
nosotrosoíamos
vosotrosoíais
ellos/ellasoían
Practice conjugations in Chapurra →

FAQ

How do you conjugate oír in Spanish?
Use the three tables on this page: presente, pretérito, and imperfecto. Match the ending to each subject pronoun.
Is oír regular or irregular?
If the forms follow the usual endings for its group, treat it as regular in your course; if they look like memorized exceptions (ser, ir, stem-changers, etc.), your instructor will flag them on exams.
What tense uses which form?
Present for now and habits; preterite for completed past actions; imperfect for ongoing or repeated past and many descriptions. Your textbook examples refine the split.

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