How to conjugate marchitar in Subjunctive Past Perfect in Spanish

marchitar
to wither
regular verb

Marchitar means to cause plants, flowers, or similar things to lose their freshness and vitality, often by drying out or fading. It can also be used metaphorically to describe the decline or fading of feelings or qualities.

How to conjugate marchitar in Subjunctive Past Perfect

El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto de Subjuntivo - used to speak about hypothetical situations in the past

Learn 20,000 Spanish words in context

Master Spanish vocabulary with our scientifically-proven spaced repetition app

Free to download

Subjunctive Past Perfect Conjugations

PronounConjugation
Yo
hubiera marchitado
hubieras marchitado
Él / Ella / Usted
hubiera marchitado
Nosotros / Nosotras
hubiéramos marchitado
Vosotros / Vosotras
hubierais marchitado
Ellos / Ellas / Ustedes
hubieran marchitado

Examples of marchitar in Subjunctive Past Perfect

Yo
Si hubiera marchitado las flores, no serían hermosas.
If I had withered the flowers, they wouldn't be beautiful.
Es posible que hubieras marchitado las plantas por descuido.
You might have withered the plants by neglect.
Él / Ella / Usted
Ella pensó que él hubiera marchitado las hojas.
She thought that he had withered the leaves.
Nosotros / Nosotras
No creí que nosotros hubiéramos marchitado las flores.
I didn't think that we had withered the flowers.
Vosotros / Vosotras
Quizá vosotros hubierais marchitado las plantas sin querer.
Maybe you all had withered the plants unintentionally.
Ellos / Ellas / Ustedes
Si ellos hubieran marchitado las flores, sería una pérdida.
If they had withered the flowers, it would be a loss.

Test Yourself with Flashcards

Card 1 of 5
Score: 0/0
Translate to English
Si hubiera marchitado las flores, no serían hermosas.

Learn 20,000 Spanish words in context

Master Spanish vocabulary with our scientifically-proven spaced repetition app

Free to download
How to conjugate marchitar in Subjunctive Past Perfect in Spanish | Habladoo