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golpea

Golpea is a Spanish verb form derived from golpear, meaning to hit or strike. Grammatically, it is the third-person singular present indicative form (él/ella/Ud. golpea) and also the affirmative tú imperative (golpea), used to give a direct command to someone familiar to hit or strike. The sense can be physical, as in punching or knocking, or metaphorical, such as making a strong impact on a situation.

As a regular -ar verb, golpear follows standard conjugation patterns. Present indicative forms include golpeo, golpeas,

Usage notes and examples: golpea can describe a physical action such as a boxer striking an opponent

Etymology: the verb derives from the noun golpe, meaning a blow or strike, with the -ar ending

golpea,
golpeamos,
golpeáis,
golpean.
Other
common
tenses
include
the
preterite:
golpeé,
golpeaste,
golpeó,
golpeamos,
golpeasteis,
golpearon;
and
the
imperfect:
golpeaba,
golpeabas,
golpeaba,
golpeábamos,
golpeabais,
golpeaban.
In
subjunctive
present:
golpee,
golpees,
golpee,
golpeemos,
golpeéis,
golpeen.
The
affirmative
tú
command
is
golpea,
while
the
negative
tú
command
is
no
golpees.
The
forms
for
usted,
ustedes,
and
nosotros
follow
the
usual
patterns
for
-ar
verbs.
(El
boxeador
golpea
a
su
oponente)
or
knocking
on
a
door
(Golpea
la
puerta).
It
can
also
convey
a
nonliteral
impact,
as
in
weather
or
sounds,
for
example:
la
lluvia
golpea
las
ventanas.
Semantically,
golpea
is
closely
related
to
golpe
(a
blow);
phrases
like
un
golpe
de
suerte
use
golpe
as
a
noun.
added
to
form
the
infinitive
golpear.