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Mojarías

Mojarías is the second-person singular conditional form of the Spanish verb mojar, meaning you would wet or soak something. It is used to express hypothetical actions or possibilities in informal speech.

The verb mojar means to wet, dampen, or soak, usually in a transitive sense with a direct

Usage notes: The conditional is employed to discuss hypothetical situations, polite requests, or conjecture about present

Mojarías thus functions as a typical irregularly non-irregular verb form in pronunciation and spelling, reflecting standard

object,
as
in
mojar
la
ropa
or
mojar
la
mano.
In
the
conditional
mood,
mojar
follows
the
regular
-ar
verb
pattern,
so
the
endings
are
-ía,
-ías,
-ía,
-íamos,
-íais,
-ían.
Accordingly,
the
full
set
of
forms
includes
yo
mojaría,
tú
mojarías,
él/ella
mojaría,
nosotros
mojaríamos,
vosotros
mojaríais,
ellos/ellas
mojarían.
The
specific
form
mojarías
is
used
when
the
subject
is
tú
(informal
you).
or
future
events.
Examples
with
mojarías
include:
“Si
lloviera,
te
mojarías”
(If
it
rained,
you
would
get
wet)
and
“Si
olvidaras
el
paraguas,
te
mojarías
al
salir”
(If
you
forgot
the
umbrella,
you
would
get
wet
when
you
go
out).
Spanish
conjugation
for
-ar
verbs
in
the
conditional
mood.
It
is
primarily
found
in
casual
or
conversational
contexts
where
addressing
someone
as
“tú.”
See
also
mojar,
conjugation
of
-ar
verbs,
conditional
mood.