Regular -ar Verbs in Spanish Past Perfect Subjunctive

Ready to express those “what if” scenarios or past regrets in Spanish? The Past Perfect Subjunctive (Pluscuamperfecto de Subjuntivo) is your superpower! This guide will help you master this tense with regular -AR verbs, which are super common and easy to learn.

What Is the Past Perfect Subjunctive?

Imagine you’re thinking back to a missed opportunity and saying, “If I had studied more, I would have gotten a better grade.” The part about studying more is in the past perfect subjunctive. It’s used to:

  • Talk about hypothetical situations in the past: Things that could have happened but didn’t.
  • Discuss actions that came before other past actions in the subjunctive mood: It’s like a flashback within a flashback!

How to Build the Past Perfect Subjunctive: Two Simple Steps

  1. The imperfect subjunctive of the helper verb ‘haber’: This sets the stage for your hypothetical situation.
  2. The past participle of your -AR verb: This is the action you’re talking about.

The formula looks like this:

Imperfect Subjunctive of ‘haber’ + Past Participle

Conjugating “Haber” in the Imperfect Subjunctive

There are two sets of endings you can use, and they mean the same thing:

Pronoun-ra Ending-se Ending
Yohubierahubiese
hubierashubieses
Él/Ella/Ustedhubierahubiese
Nosotros/ashubiéramoshubiésemos
Ellos/Ellas/Ustedeshubieranhubiesen

Forming Past Participles for Regular -AR Verbs

This is the easy part! Just drop the -AR and add -ADO.

  • trabajar (to work) → trabajado
  • hablar (to speak) → hablado
  • estudiar (to study) → estudiado
  • comprar (to buy) → comprado
  • cantar (to sing) → cantado

Putting It Together: “trabajar” (to work) in the Past Perfect Subjunctive

Pronoun-ra Ending-se Ending
Yohubiera trabajadohubiese trabajado
hubieras trabajadohubieses trabajado
Él/Ella/Ustedhubiera trabajadohubiese trabajado
Nosotros/ashubiéramos trabajadohubiésemos trabajado
Ellos/Ellas/Ustedeshubieran trabajadohubiesen trabajado

Real-World Examples: Using the Past Perfect Subjunctive

  • “Si hubiera trabajado más duro, habría conseguido el ascenso.” (If I had worked harder, I would have gotten the promotion.)
  • “Ojalá hubieses hablado con él antes de tomar la decisión.” (I wish you had spoken to him before making the decision.)
  • “No creo que hubieran comprado la casa si hubieran sabido los problemas que tenía.” (I don’t think they would have bought the house if they had known about the problems it had.)
  • “Aunque hubiéramos estudiado toda la noche, el examen habría sido difícil.” (Even if we had studied all night, the exam would have been difficult.)
  • “¿Crees que habrían cantado mejor si hubiesen practicado más?” (Do you think they would have sung better if they had practiced more?)

Tips for Success

  • Don’t sweat the -ra vs. -se endings: Both are correct! Choose the one you hear most often or that feels more natural.

Synonyms:

  • English: Regular -AR Verbs in Pluperfect Subjunctive, Past Perfect Subjunctive Mood, Anterior Past Subjunctive, Had + Past Participle Subjunctive
  • Spanish: Verbos Regulares en -AR en Pretérito Pluscuamperfecto de Subjuntivo, Subjuntivo Pasado Perfecto, Subjuntivo Antepretérito, Pretérito Anterior de Subjuntivo

Related topics:

You are here:

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.