Saturday, March 7, 2020
Conjugation of Past or Preterite Tense Verbs in Spanish
Conjugation of Past or Preterite Tense Verbs in Spanish          As one of Spanishs two simple past tenses, the preteriteà  has a conjugation that is essential to learn. It is the verb form used most often to tell of events that have already happened and that are seen as completed.         The other simple past tense, the imperfect, is used for past actions that are not completed, meaning the past action did not have a definite beginning or a definite end.          How to Conjugate the Preterite Tense      In Spanish, verbs are the words that change the most often and depend on different tenses, moods, gender, and agreement in person according to what needs to be conveyed in the sentence. A verb ending can indicate when the action occurs, and also give the listener a better idea of who or what is performing the action.         As is the case with standard Spanish conjugation rules, the preterite verb forms are made by removing the infinitive ending of the verb, such as -ar, -er or -ir, and replacing it with an ending that indicates who is performing the action of the verb. Verbs agree in person and number.         For example, the infinitive or base form of the verb that means to speak is hablar. Its infinitive ending is -ar, and the verb stem is habl-.         To say I spoke, remove the -ar, add -à © to the stem, forming hablà ©. Yo hablà © is I spoke. To say you spoke, singular you in an informal way, remove the -ar, add -aste to the stem, forming hablaste:à  Tu hablaste is You spoke. Other forms exist for other personal pronouns.         The endings are slightly different for verbs that end in -er and -ir, but the principle is the same. Remove the infinitive ending, then add the appropriate ending to the remaining stem.          Conjugation of Regular -AR Verbs in the Preterite Tense                      Person  -Ar Ending  Infinitive: Hablar  Translation: To Speak          yo  -  habl  I spoke      t  -aste  hablaste  you (informal) spoke      l, ella, usted  -  habl  he/she spoke, you (formal) spoke      nosotros, nosotras  -amos  hablamos  we spoke      vosotros, vosotras  -asteis  hablasteis  you spoke (informal)      ellos, ellas, ustedes  -aron  hablaron  they spoke, you (formal) spoke                Conjugation of Regular -ER Verbs in the Preterite Tense                      Person  -Er Ending  Infinitive: Aprender  Translation: To Learn          yo  -  aprend  I learned      t  -iste  aprendiste  you (informal) learned      l, ella, usted  -i  aprendi  he/she learned, you (formal) learned      nosotros, nosotras  -imos  aprendimos  we learned      vosotros, vosotras  -isteis  aprendisteis  you learned (informal)      ellos, ellas, ustedes  -ieron  aprendieron  they learned, you (formal) learned                Conjugation of Regular -IR Verbs in the Preterite Tense                      Person  -Ir Ending  Infinitive: Escribir  Translation: To Write          yo  -  escrib  I wrote      t  -iste  escribiste  you (informal) wrote      l, ella, usted  -i  escribi  he/she wrote, you (formal) wrote      nosotros, nosotras  -imos  escribimos  we wrote      vosotros, vosotras  -isteis  escribisteis  you wrote (informal)      ellos, ellas, ustedes  -ieron  escribieron  they wrote, you (formal) wrote               In the preterite tense, regular -er and -ir verbs use the same pattern of endings.         Additionally, the first-person plural, the we form of nosotros and nosotras, has the same conjugation for both the present indicative tense and the preterite past tense for -ar and -ir verbs. The word hablamos can mean either we speak or we spoke, and escribimos can mean either we write or we wrote. In most cases, the context of the sentence makes clear which tense is intended.          Conjugations of Common Irregular Verbs      Below are the preterite-tense for the irregular verbs you are most likely to use. Irregular forms are shown in boldface; the forms given follow the same order as in the charts above, beginning with the first-person singular and continuing to the third-person plural.         dar (to give): di, diste, dio, dimos, disteis, dieron.         decir (to say, to tell): dije, dijiste, dijo, dijimos, dijisteis, dijeron.         estar (to be): estuve, estuviste, estuvo, estuvimos, estuvisteis, estuvieron.         haber (to have as an auxiliary verb): hube, hubiste, hubo, hubimos, hubisteis, hubieron.         hacer (to make, to do): hice, hiciste, hizo, hizimos, hicisteis, hicieron.         ir (to be): fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron. (Note that the preterite conjugations of ir and ser are identical.)         llegar (to arrive): lleguà ©, llegaste, llegà ³, llegamos, llegasteis, llegaron.         poder (to be able, can): pude, pudiste, pudo, pudimos, pudisteis, pudieron.         poner (to put): puse, pusiste, puso, pusimos, puisisteis, pusieron.         querer (to be): quise, quisiste, quiso, quisimos, quisisteis, quisieron.         saber (to know): supe, supiste, supo, supimos, supisteis, supieron.         ser (to be): fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron.         tener (to have or possess): tuve, tuviste, tuvo, tuvimos, tuvisteis, tuvieron.         ver (to see): vi, viste, vio, vimos, visteis, vieron.    
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