Examples Of Impersonal Expressions In Spanish | No Subject

Spanish lets you talk about actions, rules, weather, and “what happens” without naming who does it, using set patterns like se, hay, and fixed verbs.

You’ll hear Spanish speakers leave the “doer” out all the time. Not because they’re being vague, but because Spanish has clean, normal ways to speak in general terms. Think signs, news headlines, rules, warnings, opinions, and everyday small talk.

This post gives you a practical set of impersonal expression patterns you can reuse. You’ll get sentence models, real examples, and quick checks that stop the most common mix-ups.

What Counts As An Impersonal Expression In Spanish

An impersonal expression is any structure that doesn’t name a grammatical subject. Sometimes the verb form makes that happen (weather verbs). Sometimes Spanish uses a built-in pattern to keep the actor unnamed (like se impersonals or hay).

These patterns are not “advanced tricks.” They’re core Spanish. Once you learn the handful of main types, you’ll notice them everywhere: announcements, instructions, customer service, and casual conversation.

Two Useful Labels: “No Subject” And “General People”

Some impersonals have no possible subject at all. Weather verbs sit here: Llueve, Nieva, Amanece. Nobody is “doing” the raining in the grammar.

Other impersonals still imply people in general, just not a specific person. A sign like Se prohíbe fumar clearly talks about people, but it keeps the actor unnamed.

Why Spanish Uses Impersonals So Much

They keep the sentence short. They sound neutral. They fit situations where naming a person feels odd, unknown, or unnecessary. They also help you speak politely when you don’t want to point a finger.

If you can produce these smoothly, your Spanish starts to sound more natural fast, especially in formal or public-facing contexts.

Examples Of Impersonal Expressions In Spanish In Real Sentences

Below are the most common patterns you’ll meet. Learn them as “templates.” Then swap in your own verbs and phrases.

Weather And Time Verbs

These are the easiest because they’re fixed. They don’t need a subject, and you don’t add one.

  • Llueve. (It’s raining.)
  • Nieva en enero. (It snows in January.)
  • Anochece temprano. (It gets dark early.)
  • Es tarde. (It’s late.)

Haber “Hay” To Say What Exists Or Happens

Hay is the everyday way to say “there is/there are.” It stays in singular form in standard Spanish, even when what comes after is plural. This is one of the most tested points on exams and one of the most common errors in speech.

  • Hay una tienda cerca. (There’s a store nearby.)
  • Hay muchas razones. (There are many reasons.)
  • Había dos opciones. (There were two options.)
  • Hubo problemas. (There were problems / Problems happened.)

Impersonal “Se” For Rules, Instructions, And General Statements

This is the workhorse pattern for signs and general rules. You use se + verb in third-person singular. It’s common with places, services, and public messages.

  • Se vive bien aquí. (People live well here.)
  • Se trabaja los domingos. (People work Sundays.)
  • Se prohíbe estacionar. (Parking is forbidden.)
  • Se necesita experiencia. (Experience is needed.)

Third-Person Plural With An Unnamed “They”

Spanish can use third-person plural to mean “they” in a general sense. It sounds like “someone” or “people” in English, and it’s common in speech and news.

  • Dicen que va a llover. (They say it’s going to rain.)
  • Llamaron por teléfono. (They called.)
  • Me dijeron la verdad. (They told me the truth.)

“Uno/Una” As “One/People”

Uno works like English “one” or “you” in general statements. It’s handy when you’re describing habits or shared experience without pointing at anyone.

  • Uno nunca sabe. (You never know.)
  • Cuando uno llega tarde, se pierde cosas. (When you arrive late, you miss things.)

Infinitive Instructions

Not every instruction needs a conjugated verb. Spanish often uses the infinitive on labels, notes, and quick directions. It reads like “To do X.”

  • No tocar. (Do not touch.)
  • Empujar. (Push.)
  • Girar para abrir. (Turn to open.)

Fixed “Es + Adjective + Infinitive” Opinions

This pattern gives a neutral opinion about an action, not about a person. It’s common in advice, feedback, and polite recommendations.

  • Es mejor esperar. (It’s better to wait.)
  • Es difícil entenderlo. (It’s hard to understand it.)
  • Es posible hacerlo hoy. (It’s possible to do it today.)

If you want a solid definition and the main categories in one place, the RAE’s reference entry on impersonal sentences is a reliable anchor. RAE: “Las oraciones impersonales (I)” lays out what “no subject” means in Spanish grammar.

Now that you’ve seen the big families, use the table below as a quick “pick a pattern” menu.

Pattern Best Use Reusable Sentence Model
Weather/time verb Weather, daylight, time Llueve. / Anochece temprano.
Hay / Había / Hubo Existence, events, availability Hay + noun. / Hubo + noun.
Impersonal se + 3rd sg. Rules, norms, general actions Se + verb(3rd sg.) + (place/time).
3rd-person plural “they” Reports, rumors, unknown callers Dicen que… / Llamaron…
Uno/Una + 3rd sg. General experience, habits Uno + verb(3rd sg.) + …
Infinitive instruction Signs, short directions No + infinitive. / Empujar.
Es + adjective + infinitive Neutral evaluations of actions Es + adj + infinitive.
Hay que + infinitive General necessity (“one must”) Hay que + infinitive.

How To Spot The Subject Fast

If you’re unsure whether a sentence is impersonal, try this quick check: ask “Who is doing the action?” If Spanish grammar does not allow you to name that subject, or the sentence doesn’t need one, you’re in impersonal territory.

Three Mini Checks That Work

  • Check agreement. Impersonal se typically keeps the verb in singular: Se vive, Se trabaja.
  • Check for “a + person.” When the direct object is a person with a, you’ll often get an impersonal reading: Se busca a un médico.
  • Check if the verb is fixed. Weather verbs don’t take a normal subject: Nieva stays that way.

Impersonal Se Versus Se Passive

This is where learners stumble: se can form an impersonal sentence, and it can form a passive-like sentence. The difference is not “style.” It changes what the grammar is doing.

A practical way to separate them is to watch verb agreement and the role of the noun that follows.

When It Acts Like A Passive

In a se passive, the noun behaves like the subject, so the verb often agrees with it in number.

  • Se venden casas. (Houses are sold.)
  • Se publican resultados. (Results are published.)

When It Stays Impersonal

In an impersonal se sentence, the verb stays singular, and the sentence points to people in general without naming them.

  • Se vive bien aquí. (People live well here.)
  • Se cura a los heridos. (They treat the injured / People treat the injured.)

The RAE gives a clear contrast using the “person marked with a” pattern, which is one of the cleanest signals you can learn. RAE: “Impersonales con se y pasivas reflejas” shows how the structure shifts when the object is a person.

Haber As Impersonal: The Agreement Trap

With haber meaning “to exist / to be there,” standard Spanish treats it as impersonal. That’s why it stays singular: hay, había, hubo, ha habido.

In casual speech, you may hear plural forms like habían with a plural noun after it. You’ll still see the singular form recommended in careful writing and in most formal contexts.

If you want the formal grammar description, the RAE’s grammar entry on impersonals with haber is direct and detailed. RAE: “Impersonales con haber, hacer, ser, estar” explains why the verb stays in singular in this use.

Here’s a simple habit that keeps you safe: treat the noun after hay/había/hubo as “what exists,” not as a subject that controls the verb.

Common Patterns You Can Steal For Real Life

Memorizing isolated examples can feel slow. A better move is to keep a few ready-made “frames” you can drop into conversation, writing, and messages.

Rules And Public Messages

  • Se permite + infinitive.Se permite entrar.
  • Se prohíbe + infinitive.Se prohíbe fumar.
  • Se recomienda + infinitive.Se recomienda reservar.

General Advice Without Pointing At Anyone

  • Hay que + infinitive.Hay que leer las instrucciones.
  • Es mejor + infinitive.Es mejor esperar un poco.
  • Se suele + infinitive.Se suele pagar con tarjeta.

Reports And Rumors

  • Dicen que…Dicen que el tren llega tarde.
  • Comentaron que…Comentaron que ya no queda stock.
  • Anunciaron que…Anunciaron que abren mañana.

Mistakes That Make Your Sentence Sound “Off”

Most errors come from forcing English logic onto Spanish. English likes a subject in nearly every sentence. Spanish doesn’t demand that. When you stop trying to name an actor, your grammar gets cleaner.

The table below lists the mix-ups that show up the most in learner writing and even in native speech. Treat it like a quick edit checklist.

Common Slip What Goes Wrong Safer Fix
Habían + plural noun Haber (existence) is impersonal in standard use Había muchos problemas.
Se venden a los heridos Person with a pushes the sentence toward impersonal, not passive Se atiende a los heridos. (singular)
Using “yo” to give general advice Sounds personal when you want neutral tone Hay que revisar el correo.
Turning a sign into a command Too direct in public notices No fumar / Se prohíbe fumar
Overusing uno in formal writing Can sound chatty in some texts Use se or hay que in formal contexts
Literal “it is” with a person subject Forces an actor where Spanish prefers none Es fácil hacerlo.
Making every impersonal sound passive in English Meaning shifts (“people do” vs “is done”) Translate by sense: “people,” “one,” “they,” or passive

If you want a quick authority note on the singular use of haber (the “había vs habían” question), FundéuRAE summarizes the standard recommendation in plain language. FundéuRAE: “había muchas personas, no habían muchas personas” is a handy reference when you’re proofreading.

A Simple Practice Routine That Works

Here’s a fast way to make these patterns stick without drilling grammar terms for hours. Write three short blocks, each with a different impersonal type. Keep them on topics you actually talk about.

Block 1: Availability With Hay

  • Write 5 lines that start with Hay about your area: shops, events, options.
  • Then rewrite them in past: Había, Hubo.

Block 2: Rules With Se

  • Write 5 “public notice” lines: Se permite…, Se prohíbe…, Se recomienda…
  • Keep the verb in singular unless you’re sure it’s a se passive with agreement.

Block 3: General Talk With “They”

  • Write 5 lines with Dicen que…, Comentaron que…, Anunciaron que…
  • Read them out loud. If it sounds like a rumor or report, you’re using it right.

Mini Checklist For Editing Your Own Sentences

Use this when you’re unsure which impersonal pattern fits.

  • Is it weather or time? Use a fixed verb: Llueve, Amanece, Es tarde.
  • Is it existence or an event? Use hay / había / hubo in singular.
  • Is it a rule or general action? Use impersonal se with verb in singular.
  • Is it a report with an unknown actor? Use third-person plural: Dijeron, Llamaron, Anunciaron.
  • Do you want a neutral evaluation? Use Es + adjective + infinitive.

Once you can choose the right template quickly, your Spanish gets smoother in the spots that matter: instructions, explanations, short messages, and formal-sounding statements without sounding stiff.

References & Sources