Regular Verbs in Spanish Imperfect Tense

Regular verbs in the Spanish Imperfect Tense fall into three categories based on their infinitive endings: -AR, -ER, and -IR. Each group follows a predictable conjugation pattern. Let’s break them down:

Step 1: Conjugating -AR Verbs

-AR verbs, like hablar (to speak), cantar (to sing), and trabajar (to work), transform in the imperfect tense as follows:

SubjectConjugationExample (hablar)
Yo-abaYo hablaba
-abasTú hablabas
Él/ella/usted-abaÉl/ella/usted hablaba
Nosotros/nosotras-ábamosNosotros/nosotras hablábamos
Ellos/ellas/ustedes-abanEllos/ellas/ustedes hablaban

Step 2: Conjugating -ER and -IR Verbs

Good news! -ER verbs (like comer, beber, leer) and -IR verbs (like vivir, escribir, abrir) share the exact same conjugation pattern in the imperfect tense. Here’s how they change:

SubjectConjugationExample (comer/vivir)
Yo-íaYo comía/vivía
-íasTú comías/vivías
Él/ella/usted-íaÉl/ella/usted comía/vivía
Nosotros/nosotras-íamosNosotros/nosotras comíamos/vivíamos
Ellos/ellas/ustedes-íanEllos/ellas/ustedes comían/vivían

Synonyms:

  • English: Reguar verbs in Past Continuous, Imperfect Progressive, Imperfect Continuous
  • Spanish: Verbos regulares en Pretérito Imperfecto, Copretérito, Imperfecto de Indicativo, Pretérito Progresivo, Pasado Progresivo, Pretérito Continuo

Finally, Spanish teachers worth your time!

Experience the LingoToGo difference for yourself with a free week of unlimited lessons.

Expert teachers, raving students, guaranteed fun.

No credit card required. No obligation.

Free trial only available in the Americas and Europe. If you are in another region, you can sign up for one week of unlimited Spanish lessons for one dollar. Here’s the link to sign up for $1.