Let's look at the sentence pattern. |
Do you remember how the character said, |
"Of course, I arrived many years ago to meet my grandmother." |
Claro, llegué hace muchos años para conocer a mi abuela. |
Claro, llegué hace muchos años para conocer a mi abuela. |
In this sentence, you can recognize a verb in the preterite: llegué, meaning "I arrived." |
In Spanish, we use the preterite tense to talk about specific completed actions in the past—things that happened at a particular moment. |
Let's review how the preterite is formed for three common types of regular verbs. |
Here are the preterite tense conjugations for regular verbs: |
Llegar, meaning "to arrive," ends with |
-AR and the conjugation will be: |
yo llegué – "I arrived" |
tú llegaste – "you arrived" |
él / ella llegó – "he/she arrived" |
nosotros llegamos – "we arrived" |
vosotros llegasteis – "you all arrived" |
ellos / ellas llegaron – "they arrived" |
Then we have verbs ending in -ER, for example, comer, meaning "to eat" |
yo comí – "I ate" |
tú comiste – "you ate" |
él / ella comió – "he/she ate" |
nosotros comimos – "we ate" |
vosotros comisteis – "you all ate" |
ellos / ellas comieron – "they ate" |
Finally, let's look at the -IR verbs, like vivir, "to live" |
yo viví – "I lived" |
tú viviste – "you lived" |
él / ella vivió – "he/she lived" |
nosotros vivimos – "we lived" |
vosotros vivisteis – "you all lived" |
ellos / ellas vivieron – "they lived" |
Now let's go back to the example sentence: |
Claro, llegué hace muchos años para conocer a mi abuela. |
"Of course, I arrived many years ago to meet my grandmother." |
llegué is the yo-form of the -AR verb llegar in the preterite. |
It describes a completed action—I arrived. |
hace muchos años means "many years ago"—this gives us the time reference. |
para conocer a mi abuela means "to meet my grandmother"—this shows the purpose of the trip. |
This sentence clearly uses the preterite to describe one specific action in the past. |
Now you know how to use regular preterite verbs to talk about completed actions. |
There are two other verbs from the dialogue that also follow the regular conjugation patterns. |
In the sentence |
Visitamos el centro histórico y probé antojitos típicos. |
"We visited the historic center and I tried typical local snacks." |
Both visitamos and probé are regular -AR ending verbs in the preterite. |
Their dictionary forms are |
visitar – "to visit" |
probar – "to try" or "to taste" |
Now let's look at some speaking examples. |
Ayer cociné una cena especial para mi familia. |
"Yesterday I cooked a special dinner for my family." |
Can you see how the pattern applies here? |
Let's break it down: |
ayer – meaning "yesterday" |
This gives the time reference. It's a common signal for the preterite. |
cociné – which means "I cooked" |
This is the preterite yo form of the -AR verb cocinar. It shows a completed action in the past. |
una cena especial – meaning "a special dinner" |
This is the object of the verb—it tells us what was cooked. |
para mi familia – meaning "for my family" |
This shows the purpose or who benefited from the action. |
The verb cociné is used in the preterite to talk about one specific action completed in the past. |
Here's another example |
¿Bebiste café esta mañana? |
"Did you drink coffee this morning?" |
¿Bebiste café esta mañana? |
"Did you drink coffee this morning?" |
bebiste – which means "you drank" |
This is the preterite tú form of the -ER verb beber. |
Let's try one more, |
Mis amigos aprendieron mucho en la clase de español. |
"My friends learned a lot in Spanish class." |
Mis amigos aprendieron mucho en la clase de español. |
"My friends learned a lot in Spanish class." |
aprendieron – which means "they learned" |
This is the preterite ellos/ellas form of the -ER verb aprender. |
Another one. |
Camila bailó en la fiesta el sábado pasado. |
"Camila danced at the party last Saturday." |
Camila bailó en la fiesta el sábado pasado. |
"Camila danced at the party last Saturday." |
bailó – which means "she danced" |
This is the preterite ella form of the -AR verb bailar |
One last example. |
Nosotros abrimos los regalos después de cenar. |
"We opened the presents after dinner." |
Nosotros abrimos los regalos después de cenar. |
"We opened the presents after dinner." |
abrimos – which means "we opened" |
This is the preterite nosotros form of the -IR verb abrir. |
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