The past perfect indicative, also pluperfect, (pretérito pluscuamperfecto de indicativo) is used for actions that took place before a certain time in the past. It is similar to the English past perfect tense. Learn about the conjugation and usage of the
Past Perfect Spanish Conjugation If you’re already familiar with thepresent perfecttense (and we recommend that you are), then you’ll immediately recognise that the past perfect conjugation is very similar. Past perfect Spanish requires you to use the verbhaber(to have) and conjugate it in th...
In this lesson we will get to know the Spanish verb ''venir'' (to come, come through, come round) and learn how to create its past participle as...
Conjugation games are a great resource you can use to reinforce knowledge of Spanish verbs. This lesson gives you a few great conjugation game...
Spanish learning for everyone. For free. Translation The world’s largest Spanish dictionary Conjugation Conjugations for every Spanish verb Vocabulary Learn vocabulary faster Grammar Learn every rule and exception Pronunciation Native-speaker video pronunciations Word of the Day el garabato scribble Translat...
FORMATION The PRESENT PERFECT is formed using the present form of 'to be' + the verb's conjugation that is in the past form. It’s formed with “to be + the past participle” (NOT the past tense) The PRESENT PERFECT Tense is formed using the following structure: Affirmative: Subject +...
Spanish equivalent iscomido, used to form perfect tenses such as inhe comidoandhabía comido.We could also use these words also as adjectives, as in "the eaten apple" orla manzana comida. Note that when a past participle is used as an adjective in Spanish, itchanges in number and gender...
Past participles in English aren't always as obvious as they are in Spanish, because they often take the same form as the past tense, in that they usually end in "-ed." In the verb form, you can tell when an "-ed" verb is functioning as a past participle in that it is combined...
conjugation exercise Answers verb sing I sang you sang he/she/you sang we sang you sang they/you sang Verb eat I ate you ate he/she/you ate we ate you ate they/you ate verb to sleep I slept you slept he/she/you slept we slept ...
When an English verb ends in‐edit may be in its past participle form or in a past tense conjugation. There is only one way to know for sure that it is a past participle rather than the past tense: A past participle is always preceded by some form of the helping verb “to have” ...