Spanish Preterite: Irregular Verbs

Irregular Verbs in the Preterite

Once you start delving into the Spanish preterite, you’ll find that verbs start acting in very strange ways. Unfortunately, you are going to find many irregular verbs in the Spanish preterite tense. Many irregularities in verb conjugations occur simply because of pronunciation. Spanish, unlike English, is pronounced phonetically. In other words, you can read any word in Spanish as long as you understand how to sound it out. In order to preserve the pronunciation of certain words, the spelling of those words will change.

Irregular Verbs that End in –zar, -car, -gar

Verbs that end with -zar, -car, or –gar cannot be conjugated normally in the yo form of the preterite tense without having to change their spelling of necessity to preserve the pronunciation.

For example, think of the verb pescar "to fish." Try to conjugate it normally in the yo form: pesc + -é = pescé. The letter c is a soft sound in Spanish, so the word would sound like pesé. In order to preserve the hard k sound of pescar, Spanish changes the c to a qu, making the yo form into pesqué.

The following table gives examples of some irregular verbs that change in the “yo” form to preserve the correct pronunciation. Note that the other conjugations remain regular.

Subject PronounCOMENZAR "to start"PESCAR "to fish"PAGAR "to pay"
yocomencépesqpagué
comenzastepescastepagaste
usted / él / ella,comenzópescópagó
nosotros/ascomenzamospescamospagamos
vosotros/ascomenzasteispescasteispagasteis
ustedes / ellos / ellascomenzaronpescaronpagaron

Other verbs that change in this way include jugar "to play": jugué and, buscar "to look for": busqué.

Por ejemplo:

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Comencé a escribir la semana pasada.
(I) started writing last week.
Ayer pesqué en el río.
Yesterday (I) fished in the river.
¿Le pagaste al dueño de la tienda?
Did (you) pay the shop owner?

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Stem-Changing Verbs in the Past

Do you remember what a stem change is? A stem change is when the stem of a verb (the part that is left when the –AR, -ER, or –IR ending is taken away) changes its vowel sounds from –e to –ie, –e to –i, –o to –ue, or –o to –u.

To understand stem changes in the preterite tense, you must first note that:

  1. All the —AR and —ER verbs that stem change in the present (such as mostrar "to show," almorzar "to have lunch," pensar "to think," perder "to lose," tener "to have," and entender "to understand) do NOT stem change in the preterite.

(These verbs may be irregular in other ways, however.)

In the "Spanish Present Progressive" lesson in the Beginner’s section, you learned about stem changes in present participles, such as estoy viniendo "(I) am coming," estoy durmiendo "(I) am sleeping," and estoy diciendo "(I) am saying."

  1. The –IR stem-changing verbs WILL stem change in the preterite, but only in the third person singular and plural. They follow the same rules as the present participles, except that all –o to –ue stem changers become –o to –u, and all –e to –ie stem changers become –e to –i.

(You may feel a bit discouraged to know that these verbs may have additional irregularities, such as the verbs venir "to come" and decir "to say," which you’ll study later on.)

All these rules may sound a bit confusing, so here are some examples.

Subject pronoun—o to —u—o to —u
REPETIR "to repeat"DORMIR "to sleep"
yorepetídormí
repetistedormiste
usted / él / ellarepitiódurmió
nosotros/asrepetimosdormimos
vosotros/asrepetisteisdormisteis
ustedes / ellos / ellasrepitierondurmieron

Other –e to –i verbs include servir "to serve," sentir "to feel / to smell," preferir "to prefer," and pedir "to ask for."

Other –o to –u verbs include morir "to die."

Por ejemplo:

Yo dormí toda la noche.
I slept all night.
Repetimos las palabras de la canción.
(We) repeated the words of the song.
Ella repitió el curso de inglés.
She repeated the English course.
Él se murió de amor.
He died from love.
Los muchachos durmieron demasiado anoche.
The boys slept too much last night.

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