the preterite & the imperfect concepts and forms

45
The Preterite & The Preterite & The Imperfect The Imperfect Concepts and Concepts and Forms Forms

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Page 1: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The Preterite & The Preterite & The ImperfectThe Imperfect

Concepts and FormsConcepts and Forms

Page 2: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The concept of the The concept of the Preterite TensePreterite Tense

• Expresses actions or events that began and ended at a definite time in the past: for example, a week ago, last month, yesterday, last summer.

Page 3: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

EjemplosEjemplos

• Abe Lincoln fue presidente en 1864.

• Los congresistas americanos firmaron la Declaración de Independencia el 2 de agosto, 1776.

Page 4: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Más ejemplosMás ejemplos

• Mi hija compró un Civic y yo compré un Accord el mismo día en mayo, 2005.

• Mi esposo y yo fuimos a Charleston, S.C. en abril, 2005.

Page 5: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Más ejemplosMás ejemplos

• El equipo jugó anoche.

• Ayer, mi madre me llevó a la casa de mi tía.

• Terminé el libro “Timeline” la semana pasada.

In these examples, why is the preterite used? (i.e., What is the “definite moment in the definite moment in the pastpast”?)

Page 6: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Time expressions that often Time expressions that often accompany the use of the accompany the use of the preterite tensepreterite tense

• ayer

• anoche

• anteayer

• la semana pasada

• hace un mes

• el año pasado

• el fin de semana pasada

• el verano pasado

• el domingo pasado

Page 7: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Forms for the Forms for the PreteritePreterite

Page 8: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Regular –ar VerbsRegular –ar Verbs

•-é

•-aste

•-ó

•-amos

•-asteis

•-aron

Page 9: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Ejemplo: “trabajar”

• trabajé

• trabajaste

• trabajó

• trabajamos

• trabajasteis

• trabajaron

Page 10: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Regular –ar verbs have a spelling change in the “yo” form only…

• -gar -gué

• -car -qué

• -zar -cé

… for verbs that end with:

Page 11: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Ejemplo: “jugar”

• jugué

• jugaste

• jugó

• jugamos

•jugasteis

• jugaron

Page 12: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Regular –er/-ir VerbsRegular –er/-ir Verbs

•-í

•-iste

•-ió

•-imos

•-isteis

•-ieron

Page 13: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Ejemplo: “vivir”

• viví

• viviste

• vivió

• vivimos

• vivisteis

• vivieron

Page 14: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Dar”: confused identityDar”: confused identity

• “Dar” is an “-ar” verb that prefers to belong in the company of regular “-er” and “-ir” verbs. It uses their endings:

• di dimos

• diste disteis

• dio dieron

In fact, it’s best friends with “ver”!

vi vimos

viste visteis

vio vieron

Page 15: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Irregular Verbs in the Irregular Verbs in the PreteritePreterite

• fui

• fuiste

• fue

• fuimos

• fuisteis

• fueron

Ir & Ir &

SerSer

Page 16: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Irregular categories

• “y” group (only slightly irregular)

• “worm” verbs (only slightly irregular)

• “u” group

• “v” group

• “i” group

• “j” group

Page 17: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““y” groupy” group

• The verbs that belong to this group are verbs that end in –er or –ir, and that have a vowel as the last letter in the stem.

• leer

• creer

• oír

• construir

• (caer)

• (huir)

Page 18: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

How do they work?How do they work?

• leí

• leíste

• leyó

• leímos

• leísteis

• leyeron

(leer)(leer)

The “y” replaces what letter?

Page 19: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Worm” verbsWorm” verbs

• Some verbs follow a pattern that affects only the 3rd person singular and plural forms.

• See if you can describe the pattern after studying the next two slides.

Page 20: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Worm” verb: Worm” verb: dormirdormir

• dormí

• dormiste

• durmió

• dormimos

• dormisteis

• durmieron

Before we state the rule, let’s look at another

Page 21: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Worm” verb: Worm” verb: morirmorir

• morí

• moriste

• murió

• morimos

• moristeis

• murieron

To state the rule, consider what the change is and what verbs are affected.

Page 22: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Worm” verbsWorm” verbs

• Some verbs ending in “-ir” that have an “o” in the stem, make a change from “o” to “u”.

• This change only happens in the él/ella/Ud. form and the ellos/ellas/Uds. form.

Page 23: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Other “worm” verbs:Other “worm” verbs:eeii

• pedí

• pediste

• pidió

• pedimos

• pedisteis

• pidieron

Page 24: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Recap: “y” group Recap: “y” group

• What did you find out about forming the preterite for the “y” group? What’s an example of a verb that fits in this category? • The verbs that

belong to this group are verbs that end in –er or –ir, and that have a vowel as the last letter in the stem.

Page 25: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Recap: “worm” verbsRecap: “worm” verbs

• What did you find out about forming the preterite for “worm” verbs? What’s an example of a verb that fits in this category? • The verbs that belong to

this group end in “–ir”, have either an “o” that changes to “u” or an “e” that changes to “i”, but only in the 3rd sing. and plural.

Page 26: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Now it Now it REALLYREALLY gets harder!gets harder!

We use the following preterite endings for 3 groups.

-e-e -imos-imos

-iste-iste (-isteis)(-isteis)

-o-o -ieron-ieron

““u” groupu” group

““v” groupv” group

““i” groupi” group

Page 27: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The “u” groupThe “u” group

• saber = to know/find out (sup-)

• poder = to be able/succeed(pud-)

• poner = to put (pus-)

Page 28: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Preterite forms of “saber”Preterite forms of “saber”

• supe

• supiste

• supo

• supimos

• supisteis

• supieron

Page 29: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Preterite forms of “poder”Preterite forms of “poder”

• pude

• pudiste

• pudo

• pudimos

• pudisteis

• pudieron

Page 30: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The “v” groupThe “v” group

• andar = to run, walk (anduv-)

• tener = to have (tuv-)

• estar = to be (estuv-)

Page 31: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The “i” groupThe “i” group• querer = to want (quis-)

• venir = to come (vin-)

• hacer = to do/make (hic-) (but, “él hizo”)

Page 32: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The “j” groupThe “j” group

• decir = to say/tell (dij-)

• traer = to bring (traj-)

• traducir = to translate (traduj-)

• producir = to produce (produj-)

• conducir = to drive (conduj-) -e-e -imos-imos

-iste-iste (-isteis)(-isteis)

-o-o -eron-eron

Page 33: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““decir” in the preteritedecir” in the preterite((dij-dij-))

• dije

• dijiste

• dijo

• dijimos

• dijisteis

• dijeron

Page 34: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

The concept of the Imperfect The concept of the Imperfect TenseTense

• The primary difference between the preterite and the imperfect, is that the imperfect is not specific to any specific time period in the past.

Page 35: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

UsesUses

• Age

• Continuous, habitual or repeated action(s)

• Time & date

• Interrupted action (with preterite being used to describe the interrupting action)

• Conditions or physical characteristics (provided usually as background)

Page 36: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Uses, cont’dUses, cont’d

• “heart” and “head” (emotions and mental states)

• following “mientras”

• “used to”

• “was/were __-ing”

• “was/were going to” + infinitive–Iba a estudiar, pero no lo hice.

Page 37: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

“Heart” and “Head”

• Usually when you want to express ideas such as “querer”, “esperar”, etc. or “pensar”, “creer”, etc., the preferred tense is the imperfect. (Also, many verbs preserve their meaning better when expressed in the imperfect. Sometimes these “heart/head” verbs have a slightly different meaning when used in the preterite.)

Page 38: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Verb meaningsVerb meanings

• querer = to want• no querer = to not want• saber = to know• conocer = to know• poder = to be able• no poder = to not be

able

• to try• to refuse• to find out• to meet• to succeed• to fail

Page 39: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Interrupted & Interrupting Interrupted & Interrupting ActionsActions

Whenever you have one action interrupting another action, use the preterite for the interrupting action and the imperfect for the action that was interrupted.

Page 40: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Mientras yo cocinaba, el gato se cayó de la mesa.

Page 41: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Time Expressions: ImperfectTime Expressions: Imperfect• siempre• a veces• muchas veces• de vez en

cuando• raramente• a menudo• frecuentemente• cada vez

• los __ (days/seasons)

• cada __ (day/month/season/year)

• todo el tiempo

• mientras

• ya no

““nuncanunca” may be used with ” may be used with either preterite or imperfect, either preterite or imperfect, whichever conveys the whichever conveys the intended meaning.intended meaning.

Page 42: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

““Haber”Haber”

Había = “There was” / “There were”

Hubo = “There took place”

imperfect preterite

Page 43: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Imperfect Forms: regular

• -aba

• -abas

• -aba

• -ábamos

• -abais

• -aban

-ar verbs-ar verbs

Page 44: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Imperfect Forms: regular

• -ía

• -ías

• -ía

• -íamos

• -íais

• -ían

-er/-ir verbs-er/-ir verbs

Page 45: The Preterite & The Imperfect Concepts and Forms

Imperfect: irregular

eraera éramos éramos

eras eraiseras erais

era eranera eran

iba íbamosiba íbamos

ibas ibaisibas ibais

iba ibaniba iban

veía veíamosveía veíamos

veías veíaisveías veíais

veía veíanveía veían