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Seguir

Seguir is a Spanish verb that generally means to follow, to pursue, or to continue. It can refer to physically following a person or thing, to adhering to a rule or plan, or to the continuation of an action or state. The verb is highly productive in idiomatic expressions such as seguir adelante (to go ahead), seguir con (to continue with), or seguir de cerca (to follow closely).

Etymology and related forms: Seguir comes from Latin sequi, sequi-, meaning to follow. It is cognate with

Conjugation: Seguir is irregular in the present tense, with yo sigo, tú sigues, él/ella sigue, nosotros seguimos,

Usage examples: Physical following — “El perro me siguió hasta la puerta.” Continuation — “Debemos seguir las instrucciones.”

other
Romance
languages’
verbs
for
“to
follow,”
such
as
seguir
in
Portuguese
and
French
suivre,
and
it
has
given
rise
to
related
nouns
like
seguidor
(follower)
and
seguimiento
(follow-up
or
tracking).
vosotros
seguís,
ellos
siguen.
In
the
preterite
it
forms
seguí,
seguiste,
siguió,
seguimos,
seguisteis,
siguieron,
where
the
third-person
forms
involve
a
stem
change
to
siguió/siguieron.
The
imperfect
is
regular:
seguía,
seguías,
seguía,
seguíamos,
seguíais,
seguían.
The
present
subjunctive
is
siga,
sigas,
siga,
sigamos,
sigáis,
sigan.
The
imperative
affirmative
is
sigue
(tú),
siga
(usted),
sigamos,
seguid,
sigan;
negative
forms
use
no
sigas,
no
siga,
no
sigamos,
no
sigáis,
no
sigan.
Following
a
rule
—
“Debes
seguir
la
receta
al
pie
de
la
letra.”
Progressive
aspect
—
“Sigo
estudiando”
(I
am
still
studying).
Seguimiento
and
seguidor
are
common
derivatives
in
contexts
like
media,
sports,
and
social
networks.