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Aragonese
Etymology
Possibly from a Vulgar Latin *conquisitāre, present active infinitive of *conquisitō, from Latin conquisitus, past participle of conquīrō.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /konkisˈta(ɾ)/
- Rhymes: -a(ɾ)
- Syllabification: con‧quis‧tar
Verb
conquistar
- (transitive) to conquer
Conjugation
This entry needs an inflection-table template.
References
Catalan
Etymology
Possibly from a Vulgar Latin *conquīsītāre (compare Occitan conquistar, Portuguese and Spanish conquistar, Italian conquistare), from Latin conquīsītus, perfect passive participle of conquīrō. It may alternatively be an old derivative of conquist, from a variant of Old Catalan conquest, the archaic past participle of conquerir.[1]
Pronunciation
Verb
conquistar (first-person singular present conquisto, first-person singular preterite conquistí, past participle conquistat)
- to conquer
- Synonym: conquerir
- to convince, to persuade
- Synonyms: convèncer, persuadir
Conjugation
Derived terms
References
Further reading
Galician
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /koŋkisˈtaɾ/
- Rhymes: -aɾ
- Hyphenation: con‧quis‧tar
Verb
conquistar (first-person singular present conquisto, first-person singular preterite conquistei, past participle conquistado)
- (transitive) to conquer
- Synonym: (literary) conquerir
Conjugation
Conjugation of conquistar
|
Singular
|
Plural
|
First-person (eu)
|
Second-person (ti / tu)
|
Third-person (ele / ela / você)
|
First-person (nós)
|
Second-person (vós)
|
Third-person (eles / elas / vocês)
|
Infinitive
|
Impersonal
|
conquistar
|
Personal
|
conquistar
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conquistares
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conquistar
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conquistarmos
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conquistardes
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conquistarem
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Gerund
|
|
conquistando
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Past participle
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Masculine
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conquistado
|
conquistados
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Feminine
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conquistada
|
conquistadas
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Indicative
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Present
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conquisto
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conquistas
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conquista
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conquistamos
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conquistades, conquistais
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conquistam
|
Imperfect
|
conquistava
|
conquistavas
|
conquistava
|
conquistávamos
|
conquistávades, conquistáveis, conquistávais1
|
conquistavam
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Preterite
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conquistei
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conquistaste, conquistache1
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conquistou
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conquistamos
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conquistastes
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conquistárom, conquistaram
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Pluperfect
|
conquistara
|
conquistaras
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conquistara
|
conquistáramos
|
conquistárades, conquistáreis, conquistárais1
|
conquistaram
|
Future
|
conquistarei
|
conquistarás
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conquistará
|
conquistaremos
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conquistaredes, conquistareis
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conquistarám, conquistarão
|
Conditional
|
conquistaria
|
conquistarias
|
conquistaria
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conquistaríamos
|
conquistaríades, conquistaríeis, conquistaríais1
|
conquistariam
|
Subjunctive
|
Present
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conquiste
|
conquistes
|
conquiste
|
conquistemos
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conquistedes, conquisteis
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conquistem
|
Imperfect
|
conquistasse
|
conquistasses
|
conquistasse
|
conquistássemos
|
conquistássedes, conquistásseis
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conquistassem
|
Future
|
conquistar
|
conquistares
|
conquistar
|
conquistarmos
|
conquistardes
|
conquistarem
|
Imperative
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Affirmative
|
|
conquista
|
conquiste
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conquistemos
|
conquistade, conquistai
|
conquistem
|
Negative (nom)
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nom conquistes
|
nom conquiste
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nom conquistemos
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nom conquistedes, nom conquisteis
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nom conquistem
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Derived terms
Further reading
Portuguese
Etymology
Possibly from a Vulgar Latin *conquisitāre,[1] from Latin conquisitus, past participle of conquīrō. Displaced Old Galician-Portuguese conquerer. It may also be analyzed as an internal derivative of the past participle of the aforementioned Old Portuguese verb, or an early Romance formation; compare the other cognates on this page.
Pronunciation
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /kõ.kiʃˈtaɾ/, /kõ.kɨʃˈtaɾ/
- (Southern Portugal) IPA(key): /kõ.kiʃˈta.ɾi/, /kõ.kɨʃˈta.ɾi/
- Hyphenation: con‧quis‧tar
Verb
conquistar (first-person singular present conquisto, first-person singular preterite conquistei, past participle conquistado)
- to conquer
- to acquire by arms; to win in war
Em 146 a.C., O Império Romano conquistou a Grécia- In 146 BC, the Roman Empire conquered Greece
- Synonyms: ocupar, invadir
- to earn or achieve something through effort
Conquistei meu sonho- I made my dream real
- Synonyms: realizar, conseguir
- to captivate, to charm, to seduce (to attract the attention of someone)
Ela me conquistou- She seduced me
- Synonyms: seduzir, atrair
Conjugation
1Brazilian Portuguese.
2European Portuguese.
Quotations
For quotations using this term, see Citations:conquistar.
Derived terms
References
Spanish
Etymology
Possibly from a hypothetical Vulgar Latin *conquīsītāre,[1] from Latin conquīsītus, perfect passive participle of conquīrō; alternatively, it may simply be an internal formation, as a derivation of conquista, from the feminine past participle of Old Spanish conquerir, which this verb replaced over time.[2]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /konkisˈtaɾ/
- Rhymes: -aɾ
- Syllabification: con‧quis‧tar
Verb
conquistar (first-person singular present conquisto, first-person singular preterite conquisté, past participle conquistado)
- (transitive) to conquer
- (figuratively, transitive) to enamor, romantically convince
- (figuratively, transitive) to charm (an object to a person)
Ese carro me conquistó- That car charmed me (I liked that car a lot).
Conjugation
1Mostly obsolete, now mainly used in legal language.
2Argentine and Uruguayan voseo prefers the tú form for the present subjunctive.
Selected combined forms of conquistar
These forms are generated automatically and may not actually be used. Pronoun usage varies by region.
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singular
|
plural
|
1st person
|
2nd person
|
3rd person
|
1st person
|
2nd person
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3rd person
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with infinitive conquistar
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dative
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conquistarme
|
conquistarte
|
conquistarle, conquistarse
|
conquistarnos
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conquistaros
|
conquistarles, conquistarse
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accusative
|
conquistarme
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conquistarte
|
conquistarlo, conquistarla, conquistarse
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conquistarnos
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conquistaros
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conquistarlos, conquistarlas, conquistarse
|
|
with gerund conquistando
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dative
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conquistándome
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conquistándote
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conquistándole, conquistándose
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conquistándonos
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conquistándoos
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conquistándoles, conquistándose
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accusative
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conquistándome
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conquistándote
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conquistándolo, conquistándola, conquistándose
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conquistándonos
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conquistándoos
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conquistándolos, conquistándolas, conquistándose
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|
with informal second-person singular tú imperative conquista
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dative
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conquístame
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conquístate
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conquístale
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conquístanos
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not used
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conquístales
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accusative
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conquístame
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conquístate
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conquístalo, conquístala
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conquístanos
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not used
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conquístalos, conquístalas
|
|
with informal second-person singular vos imperative conquistá
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dative
|
conquistame
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conquistate
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conquistale
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conquistanos
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not used
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conquistales
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accusative
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conquistame
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conquistate
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conquistalo, conquistala
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conquistanos
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not used
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conquistalos, conquistalas
|
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with formal second-person singular imperative conquiste
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dative
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conquísteme
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not used
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conquístele, conquístese
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conquístenos
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not used
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conquísteles
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accusative
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conquísteme
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not used
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conquístelo, conquístela, conquístese
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conquístenos
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not used
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conquístelos, conquístelas
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with first-person plural imperative conquistemos
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dative
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not used
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conquistémoste
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conquistémosle
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conquistémonos
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conquistémoos
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conquistémosles
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accusative
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not used
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conquistémoste
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conquistémoslo, conquistémosla
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conquistémonos
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conquistémoos
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conquistémoslos, conquistémoslas
|
|
with informal second-person plural imperative conquistad
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dative
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conquistadme
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not used
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conquistadle
|
conquistadnos
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conquistaos
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conquistadles
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accusative
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conquistadme
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not used
|
conquistadlo, conquistadla
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conquistadnos
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conquistaos
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conquistadlos, conquistadlas
|
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with formal second-person plural imperative conquisten
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dative
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conquístenme
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not used
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conquístenle
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conquístennos
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not used
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conquístenles, conquístense
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accusative
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conquístenme
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not used
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conquístenlo, conquístenla
|
conquístennos
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not used
|
conquístenlos, conquístenlas, conquístense
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Derived terms
References
Further reading