Post on 27-Mar-2015
transcript
-ar
x
-er/-ir
x
Many of the most common verbs in Spanish are irregular in the preterit tense. Fortunately, even the irregular verbs follow patterns.
Ser / Irfui fuimos
fuiste fuisteisfue fueron
Ser and ir, although they mean completely different things, are identical in the preterit tense. Context and the a that usually follows ir are the only ways to determine whether ser or ir is being used.
Miguel fue al banco. Miguel fue un alumno estupéndo.
The a following fue indicates that it is a
form of ir.
CONTEXT: Chances are, Miguel was never a bank. This suggests that fue is not a form of ser in this sentence.
The absence of a following fue
indicates that it is a form of ser.
CONTEXT: It is feasible that Miguel was a stupendous student, which would support the possibility that fue is a form of ser in this sentence.
“Dar” and “ver” fit into their own category because they both have the same irregular endings. They are the “er/ir” endings without the accents, even for “dar”.
Di Dimos
Diste Disteis
Dio Dieron
Vi Vimos
Viste Visteis
Vio Vieron
1. Solo “Yo”2. Carqué3. Gargué4. Zarcé
Saqué Sacamos
Sacaste X
Sacó Sacaron
1. Sólo verbos “ir”2. e-i3. o-u 4. Sólo en “the bottom of the boot”
Dormí Dormimos
Dormiste X
Durmió Durmieron
Then it has an irregular stem: “hic”Except for the “él, ella, usted” ending its
“hiz”.
At least there’s no accents!!!
Hacer
hice hicimoshiciste hicisteishizo hicieron
Common Irregular Preterit Endings
-e -imos-iste isteis-o -ieron
Hacer, querer, venir, saber, traer, poder, and poner all share these endings. However, their stems change before adding these endings.
Infinitive Stem (in the Preterit)
Endings
hacer hic-*
-e-iste-o
-imosisteis-ieron
querer quis-
venir vin-
saber sup-
traer traj-**
poder pud-
poner pus-
estar estuv -
andar anduv-
tener tuv -
conducir conduj-**
decir dij-**• Hic- changes to hiz- in the third-person singular (hizo) to preserve the “s”
sound that is present in the other preterit forms of hacer.• ** Dijieron changes to dijeron. Trajieron changes to trajeron.• Condujieron changes to condujeron.
Verbs that end with –eer are irregular in the preterit tense, but are alike. Look at the following examples:
leerleí leímosleíste leísteisleyó leyeron
caercaí caímos caíste caísteiscayó cayeron
Oir fits in the same category with verbs that end in “-eer” and “-aer” w/ accents on all “I’s” and “y” in the bottom of the boot.
Oí Oímos
Oíste Oísteis
Oyó Oyeron
Similar, but do not have accents on all forms. Construir
Construí Construimos
Construiste Construisteis
Construyó Construyeron
Hay – There is/areHabia – There was/ were *****Hubo****** – There was/were