Download Regular Preterite Tense Verbs - Shiloh Spanish 2/3/4 Website

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Zulu grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Navajo grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lexical semantics wikipedia , lookup

Sanskrit grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Georgian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Proto-Indo-European verbs wikipedia , lookup

Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Irish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

Russian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Icelandic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Sotho verbs wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Hungarian verbs wikipedia , lookup

Germanic weak verb wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek verbs wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Spanish verbs wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Germanic strong verb wikipedia , lookup

German verbs wikipedia , lookup

Arabic verbs wikipedia , lookup

Bulgarian conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Dutch conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Finnish verb conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Kagoshima verb conjugations wikipedia , lookup

Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
The Preterite Tense
by Steve Fortna
The Preterite Tense (also spelled "preterit") is one of two ways to talk about events that happened in the past in
Spanish. The preterite tense is used to indicate a single, completed action that took place at a specific point in time.
For example:
Armando me llamó a las nueve.
Armando called me at nine o'clock.
Regresaron de España ayer.
They returned from Spain yesterday.
Olivia se fue esta tarde.
Olivia left this afternoon.
Preterite conjugations can be pretty tricky due to the large amount of irregular verbs and some other complicated
situations. To learn how to form preterite conjugations, keep reading. For more on when to use the Preterite Tense,
Regular Preterite Tense Verbs
To conjugate regular "-ar" verbs in the preterite, take off the ending and add the following:
"-ar" endings:
-é
-aste
-ó
-amos
-asteis
-aron
Don't let the "-é" in the yo form throw you off; it's still an "-ar" verb conjugation. It's absolutely critical that the "o" in
the él/ella/usted form conjugation get an accent mark so it isn't confused with the present tense yo form conjugation.
To conjugate regular "-er" and "-ir" verbs in the preterite, take off the endings and add the following:
"-er" / "-ir" endings:
-í
-iste
-ió
-imos
-isteis
-ieron
Here are some examples:
hablar:
hablé
hablaste
habló
hablamos
hablasteis
hablaron
comer:
comí
comiste
comió
comimos
comisteis
comieron
vivir:
viví
viviste
vivió
vivimos
vivisteis
vivieron
Preterite Spelling Change Verbs
The yo form endings for "-ar" verbs occasionally cause pronunciation problems because some letters are
pronounced differently depending on the vowels that follow them. The letters "c" and "g," for example, sound
different when they're followed by an "a" or an "o" than when they're followed by an "e" or "i." Since the preterite yo
form ending is an "e", we need to change the spellings of the stems of "-car" verbs, "-gar" verbs, and "-zar" verbs in
order to keep the pronunciation consistent.
The Preterite Tense
by Steve Fortna
For example:
tocar (c → qu):
toqué
tocaste
tocó
jugar (g → gu):
tocamos
tocasteis
tocaron
jugué
jugaste
jugó
lanzar (z → c):
jugamos
jugasteis
jugaron
lancé
lanzaste
lanzó
lanzamos
lanzasteis
lanzaron
Tocar has a "-que" ending in the yo form to keep the original "c" sound being pronounced like a "k" rather than like
an "s." Jugar now has a "-gue" ending to keep the original "g" sound pronounced like a "g" rather than like an "h."
And lanzar now has a "-ce" because, well… anytime we can use a "c," we should. The "e" ending gives us an
opportunity to do so.
It doesn't happen often, but "-guar" verbs will also require a spelling change. Take a verb like averiguar which
means "to verify." When we conjugate in the yo form of the preterite, we need to add a "dieresis," which means the
"u" becomes a "ü":
Yo averigüé los datos ayer.
I verified the facts yesterday.
The "ü" tells us to pronounce the "gu" like a "gw" so that our pronunciation will be consistent with the infinitive,
averiguar.
These spelling changes only happen for "-ar" preterite verbs and only in the yo form because the "-e" is the only
ending that creates problems for the "c," "g," "z" and the "gu."
More Spelling Changes
Certain "-er" and "-ir" verbs are also going to need spelling changes to keep pronunciation consistent. This time
around it's the él/ella/Ud. and ellos/ellas/Uds. forms that cause problems. The endings for those conjugations are "ió" and "-ieron." Notice how they both start with two vowels? If we have a verb whose stem ends in a vowel, and
then we add one of those endings, we're going to end up with three vowels in a row. It's difficult to pronounce a word
with a three vowel combination. To solve that problem, we change the "i" to a "y."
Some common trouble making verbs conjugated in the ellos/ellas/Uds. form:
infinitive:
stem:
three vowels:
i→ y spelling change:
caer
contribuir
creer
leer
incluir
oír
cacontribucreleincluo-
caieron
contribuieron
creieron
leieron
incluieron
oieron
cayeron
contribuyeron
creyeron
leyeron
incluyeron
oyeron
The él/ella/Ud. form conjugations will use the same spelling change. Here is a complete set of conjugations for
some common verbs:
caer:
caí
caíste
cayó
caímos
caísteis
cayeron
leer:
leí
leíste
leyó
leímos
leísteis
leyeron
oír:
oí
oíste
oyó
oímos
oísteis
oyeron
Note: In addition to the "i" → "y" spelling change, it is necessary to add an accent mark to the tú, nosotros, and vosotros form endings.
(The yo form already has an accent.). As you can see, this "i" → "y" spelling change only occurs in the bottom row of conjugations.
The Preterite Tense
by Steve Fortna
Note: Verbs ending in "-ñir" or "-llir" use "-ó" and "-eron" endings instead of "-ió" and "-ieron" because they already
have a "y" sound in their stems: gruñó, zambulleron.
An exception to the "i" → "y" spelling change rule are "-guir" verbs and "-quir" verbs. While the stems do end in a
vowel, the "u" is not actually being pronounced. Because of that, we can pronounce the three vowels in a row and a
"y" is not necessary.
infinitive:
stem:
preterite:
extinguir
extingu-
extinguieron
Preterite Stem Changing Verbs
Stem Changing "-ar" and "-er" Verbs
All "-ar" and "-er" verbs which have stem changes in the present tense are completely regular in the preterite, which
is to say that they don't have stem changes in the preterite. Notice how the stem does not change in any
conjugation:
pensar (e → ie):
pensé
pensaste
pensó
perder (e → ie):
pensamos
pensasteis
pensaron
perdí
perdiste
perdió
perdimos
perdisteis
perdieron
Stem Changing "-ir" Verbs
Stem-changing "-ir" verbs do have a stem change which is sometimes different from the present tense stem change;
"e → ie" stem changers in the present tense become "e → i" stem changers in the preterite, "e → i" stem changers
remain "e → i", and "o → ue" stem changers become "o → u":
present tense:
preterite tense:
e → ie
e→i
o → ue
e→i
e→i
o→u
However, this change only happens in the él/ella/usted form and the ellos/ellas/ustedes form:
sentir (e → ie):
sentí
sentiste
sintió
sentimos
sentisteis
sintieron
mentir (e → i):
mentí
mentiste
mintió
mentimos
mentisteis
mintieron
dormir (o → ue):
dormí
dormiste
durmió
dormimos
dormisteis
durmieron
In some books verbs like these will have special notations to let you know about the additional preterite
stem change: sentir (e → ie, e → i), dormir (o → ue, o → u), etc.
The Preterite Tense
by Steve Fortna
Irregular Preterite Tense Verbs
The "U" Group, "I" Group, and "J" Group
There are many irregular preterite conjugations which have both stem changes (only in the preterite tense) and their
own set of endings. It can be helpful to put them into groups to help you memorize them.
The "U" Group
Note: Any verbs based on these irregular verbs have the same irregularities; imponer → inpus-,
proponer → propus-, detener → detuv-, etc.
Most of the irregular verbs have stem changes which involve the letter "u":
andar
caber
estar
poder
poner
saber
tener
→
→
→
→
→
→
→
anduvcupestuvpudpussuptuv-
The "I" Group
Note: Any verbs based on these irregular verbs have the same irregularities; convenir → convin-,
prevenir → previn-, etc.
There are a couple others with stem changes involving the letter "i":
querer
venir
→
→
quisvin-
For both of these groups, the "u" group and the "i" group, there is a different set of endings:
-e
-iste
-o
-imos
-isteis
-ieron
Note that these endings are very similar to the "-ir" verbs with the exception of the yo and él/ella/usted forms, and
that there are no accent marks needed. Some examples:
saber:
supe
supiste
supo
supimos
supisteis
supieron
tener:
tuve
tuviste
tuvo
tuvimos
tuvisteis
tuvieron
venir:
vine
viniste
vino
vinimos
vinisteis
vinieron
The "J" Group
Note: Any verbs based on these irregular verbs have the same irregularities;
predecir → predij-, extraer → extraj-, etc.
bendecir → bendij-,
The Preterite Tense
by Steve Fortna
There is one more group of stem changers, the "j" group:
conducir
decir
producir
traer
→
→
→
→
condujdijprodujtraj-
The endings for the "j" group stems are almost identical to the "u"/"i" group verbs:
-e
-iste
-o
-imos
-isteis
-eron
Notice that there is no "i" in the ellos/ellas/ustedes form ending. Some examples:
decir:
dije
dijiste
dijo
dijimos
dijisteis
dijeron
traer:
traje
trajiste
trajo
trajimos
trajisteis
trajeron
Other Irregular Preterite Verbs
There are several other completely irregular preterite verbs. Here are the conjugations for dar, hacer, ir, and ser.
dar:
di
diste
dio
dimos
disteis
dieron
hacer:
hice
hiciste
hizo
ir:
fui
fuiste
fue
hicimos
hicisteis
hicieron
ser:
fuimos
fuisteis
fueron
fui
fuiste
fue
fuimos
fuisteis
fueron
Note: The verb satisfacer (to satisfy) follows the pattern of hacer: satisfice, satisficiste, satisfizo, etc. That's not a
typo—the conjugations of ir and ser are identical—context makes the meaning clear.
If you look carefully, you'll notice that hacer isn't completely irregular (it could fit quite nicely the "i" group) but the
need for consistent pronunciation forces us to use a "z" in the él/ella/usted form.