Indicative past tenses in Spanish is one of the steps that you will need to climb if you want to reach the intermediate level. You will need to master the contrast of all the tenses that allow you to speak about the past, properly.
How can you express past actions? What about descriptions in the past? Do habits work with the same tenses? Keep reading our article and you will find out.
Pretérito indefinido in Spanish
Also known as pretérito perfecto simple is mostly used as the past simple in English. Using it, we can express finished past actions at a specific moment in the past. It’s very used in narrative when we enumerate series of events.
Regarding its constructions, students often struggle to form it. There are tons of irregular verbs to learn, with changes, not only in their roots but also in their endings. Let´s see the regular ones.
And now some examples of irregular verbs.
Finally, here you can find some sentences with the pretérito indefinido.
Ayer fui a la oficina a las ocho. Trabajé todo el día y cené en casa. Me acosté pronto.
Pretérito imperfecto in Spanish
This is the other side of the past simple in English. The imperfect tense in other of the indicative tenses in Spanish that is used to describe and to express past habits, among other uses. It’s form is very easy to learn and there are only few irregular verbs. Let’s see them.
Cuando era un niño, hacía deporte a diario. Recuerdo cómo jugábamos al fútbol. Era una época feliz.
Pretérito perfecto in Spanish
We also call it pretérito pefecto compuesto. This is one of the indicative past tenses in Spanish that has an equivalent in English: the present perfect. Their uses are similar to English. Expressing experiences in somebody’s life and past actions in a non-finished period of time are their most common uses. The form is quite easy. You just need to know el presente de indicativo of the verb haber and the participle of the main verb. Here you have:
How can you put it in practice? Let’s have a look:
Hoy he estudiado todo el día para el examen DELE. Nunca he hecho este examen y por eso me he sentido un poco nervioso.
Pretérito pluscuamperfecto in Spanish
We’re going to finish with the strangest name of a verbal tense. It actually means ‘more than perfect’ in Latin. So, what the pluscuamperfecto expresses is a past action that happened before another past action. Again we have one of the indicative past tenses in Spanish that can be find in English: the past perfect. Similar to the pretérito perfecto, it is formed with the auxiliary verb haber in its imperfect tense and a participle.
So, this i show it looks in a sentence:
Antes de hacer el examen DELE, mis amigos y yo habíamos reservado clases en Spanishviaskype. Yo he asistido a muchos cursos de español, pero nunca había hecho uno tan divertido.
As you can see, the contrast of the indicative past tenses in Spanish is not a simple matter. On www.spanishviaskype.com we can help you. Our Spanish for different levels course can make the difference. We are looking forward to meeting you!
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