To ask someone to do something in Spanish, we normally use the verb pedir (to ask in this context). This is how it works if we express it in El Pretérito Imperfecto, El Pretérito Indefinido or El Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto:
Notice how in English what is asked is expressed with an infinitive:
"The thief asked me to give him all my money"
while in Spanish we use El Pretérito Imperfecto Subjuntivo, after "que":
"El ladrón me pidió que le diera/diese todo mi dinero."
The verb in El Pretérito Imperfecto Subjuntivo after que will be conjugated in the person who is asked, in this case "I" (The thief asked me...)
With "pedir" you will generally find an indirect object pronoun (me, te, le, nos, os, les) in this type of sentence as one normally asks "someone" to do something, e.g "me pidió que...", "les había pedido que..." or an indirect object always using "a", e.g "Ella pedía a su hermano que...", "yo nunca pedí a Antonio que...". In English there is no need to use a preposition: "He asked Laura..." but in Spanish you do need "a": "Le pidió a Laura que...".
Using the verb decir as a command
The Spanish verb decir is also used as a command when you want to say for example: they told me/asked me to do something. It generally (but not always) expresses a stronger request than the verb pedir which conveys more politeness.
As with pedir que, decir que, used as a command verb, is always followed by the subjunctive. It's mostly used in past tenses, therefore this will trigger the El Pretérito Imperfecto Subjuntivo:
Here are other examples:
Remember:
See also Pedir followed by the Spanish present subjunctive to ask someone to do something
Also remember that in Spanish there are two possible conjugations for El Pretérito Imperfecto Subjuntivo. To revise this see Conjugate Spanish verbs in the Spanish imperfect subjunctive tense (El Imperfecto de Subjuntivo)
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