Showing posts with label spanish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spanish. Show all posts

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Regular Spanish verbs

I couldn't find a good, short, easy explanation about regular Spanish verbs. And as I never really took the time to learn them (after almost a year of learning Spanish xD) I decided to make a quick chart to study, and some pinpoints for when to use them.

Present
Preterite
habl o
habl as
habl a
habl amos
habl áis
habl an
com o
com es
com e
com emos
com éis
com en
viv o
viv es
viv e
viv imos
viv ís
viv e
habl é
habl aste
habl ó
habl amos
habl asteis
habl aron
com í
com iste
com ió
com imos
com isteis
com ieron
viv í
viv iste
viv ió
viv imos
viv isteis
viv ieron
Imperfect
Future
habl aba
habl abas
habl aba
habl ábamos
habl abais
habl aban
com ía
com ías
com ía
com íamos
com íais
com ían
viv ía
viv ías
viv ía
viv íamos
viv íais
viv ían
hablar é
hablar ás
hablar á
hablar emos
hablar éis
hablar án
comer é
comer ás
comer á
comer emos
comer éis
comer én
vivir é
vivir ás
vivir á
vivir emos
vivir éis
vivir én
Conditional
Subjunctive
hablar ía
hablar ías
hablar ía
hablar íamos
hablar íais
hablar ían
comer ía
comer ías
comer ía
comer íamos
comer íais
comer ían
vivir ía
vivir ías
vivir ía
vivir íamos
vivir íais
vivir ían
habl e
habl es
habl e
habl emos
habl éis
habl en
com a
com as
com a
com amos
com áis
com an
viv a
viv as
viv a
viv amos
viv áis
viv an
Gerund
Past participle
habl ando
com iendo
viv iendo
habl ado
com ido
viv ido

Present
Pretty obvious when to use this, same as in English

Preterite
Past tense.  You use this one when:
-          Something occurred at a fixed point in time
-          Something was done a specific number of times
-          Describing a chain of events
-          Something occurred in a specific enclosed period of time
-          Describing a sudden change of mood
(…in the past)
So, generally, you use the preterite when you know exactly when something happened.

Imperfect
Another past tense. This is used:
-          When talking about actions that occurred repeatedly
-          When something occurred over an extended period of time
-          To start off something you describe, like ‘we were going home when… ‘
-          When describing feelings and mental actions
(of course,  in the past)

Future
You use this when usually in English you would use will or shall. For things in the near future it’s usually better to use ‘ir a’, for things further in the future, use the future tense. It’s also used to express wonder or probability in the present tense (‘who could she be?’).
Note that in the future tense, the endings get added to the complete verb and not tot the stem.

Conditional
This is a very easy one as all you need to do is add the endings of the imperfect (in –er and –ir) to the complete verb (like in the future). This makes it basically a future in the past.
It’s often used wonder or probability in the past (‘who could she have been?’), but also just to describe the future from the perspecrtive of the past.

Subjunctive
The subjunctive is usually used to express doubt, hope, a wish, an opinion.. anything that’s not objective or a fact. It can be quite tricky. It is NOT used with these expression:

creer que ...
to believe that ...
no dudar que ...
to not doubt that ...
es cierto que ...
it is certain that ...
es claro que ...
it is clear that ...
es evidente que ...
it is certain that ...
es obvio que ...
it is obvious that ...
estar seguro que ...
to be sure that ...
es verdad que ...
it is true that ...
no cabe duda que ...
there's no doubt that ...
no es dudoso que ...
it is not doubtful that ...
no hay duda que ...
there is no doubt that ...

Credit goes to Study Spanish. All I did was make a summary.