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Preterite vs Imperfect: A Beginner’s Guide to the Past Tense in Spanish. Ready for a blast from the past? As you may know, Spanish has two past tenses: preterite and imperfect. It’s often tricky to know which to use when, since they both refer to actions in the past.
Master this conjugation chart and you'll know how to conjugate over 360 spanish verbs in 7 most commonly used tenses! Don't forget to print your copy of our Spanish conjugation chart for regular verbs, because repetition is key!
Practice the conjugation rules for verbs in the imperfect past tense in Spanish. Solve two exercises on a nice PDF worksheet.
Free Spanish Grammar Worksheets in PDF with answers for Spanish teachers and students-- Download / print to use in classrooms, homework, etc.
The imperfect tense is used to talk about an ongoing action in the past. For example, if you are telling a friend something that happened to you, you’ll use the imperfect to describe the context or set the scene for past events, or to describe repeated or customary actions (like the English construction “used to”). Time and age are often
I wanted to have a concise ready-to-print cheat sheet with all conjugated forms of regular Spanish verbs. Surprisingly, I wasn’t able to find a good one on the internet (but I admit I didn’t try that hard), so I decided to make one myself.
There are three main types of Spanish (infinitive) verbs: ar verbs, er verbs and ir verbs. ar verbs: the verb ends with ar – estar, andar, hablar, bailar. er verbs: the verb ends with er – comer, aprender, leer, entender. ir verbs: the verb ends with ir – vivir, abrir, compartir, mentir.