Preterite Sentences in Spanish | Speak About Past Clearly

The Spanish preterite tense lets you tell finished past actions with clean timing, so your stories sound direct and easy to follow.

Spanish has two common past tenses, and the preterite is the one you use when something is already done. A trip ended. A text arrived. A plan got finished. When your listener needs a clear “it happened, it’s over,” the preterite keeps the message tight.

You’ll get reusable sentence patterns, the endings that show up most, and plenty of short Spanish lines with English meanings.

What The Preterite Tense Communicates

Think of the preterite as a past tense with a closed door. The action sits inside a finished time block, even if that block is tiny. The point stays the same: it started and it ended.

Finished Actions

Use the preterite for actions that got completed, even when the action took a while.

  • Terminé la tarea. — I finished the homework.
  • Vivimos en Chile tres años. — We lived in Chile for three years.
  • Comieron pizza anoche. — They ate pizza last night.

Single Events And Clear Moments

If something happened once, or you can point to the moment it happened, the preterite fits.

  • Llegué a casa a las ocho. — I got home at eight.
  • Me llamó mi hermana. — My sister called me.
  • Se rompió el vaso. — The glass broke.

Sequences In A Story

When you list steps in the past, Spanish often strings preterite verbs together. It reads like a timeline.

  • Me levanté, me duché y salí. — I got up, showered, and left.

How Preterite Sentences Are Built

Most Spanish sentences follow the same basic order: subject, verb, then the rest. Spanish drops the subject a lot, since the verb ending tells you who did it.

Subject Optional, Clarity First

Hablé already means “I spoke,” so yo is optional. Use the subject when you want contrast or you’re switching speakers.

  • Hablé con el profesor. — I spoke with the teacher.
  • Yo hablé con el profesor, y ella habló con la directora. — I spoke with the teacher, and she spoke with the principal.

Time Words That Pair Well With The Preterite

Time phrases can push your sentence toward a finished past and remove doubt.

  • ayer (yesterday), anoche (last night), el lunes (on Monday)
  • la semana pasada (last week), hace dos días (two days ago)
  • una vez (once), ya (already)

Conjugation Basics You Can Reuse

Sentence building gets easier when the endings feel familiar. Start with regular verbs, then add the common change-ups.

Regular Endings For -Ar Verbs

Take the stem (drop -ar) and add the ending.

  • hablarhablé, hablaste, habló, hablamos, hablaron

Regular Endings For -Er And -Ir Verbs

-er and -ir share the same endings in the preterite.

  • comercomí, comiste, comió, comimos, comieron
  • vivirviví, viviste, vivió, vivimos, vivieron

Spelling Changes That Protect The Sound

Some verbs tweak a letter so the pronunciation stays steady.

  • buscarbusqué (yo)
  • llegarllegué (yo)
  • empezarempecé (yo)

These spelling shifts happen only in the yo form, so the rest of the conjugation stays regular each time.

Preterite Sentences in Spanish With Real-Life Examples

Below are sentence models you can borrow for your own writing and speaking. Swap the subject, change the noun, and you’ve got a fresh line.

Daily Life And Routines

  • Preparé desayuno y limpié la cocina. — I made breakfast and cleaned the kitchen.
  • Perdí mi cartera, pero la encontré. — I lost my wallet, but I found it.

School And Work Moments

  • El jefe pidió el informe y lo entregué. — The boss asked for the report and I turned it in.
  • Mandaron un correo y respondí rápido. — They sent an email and I replied quickly.

Object pronouns slide in front of the conjugated verb: lo entregué, la vi, me llamó. That placement stays the same in the preterite.

Travel And Getting Around

  • Tomé el tren y llegué tarde. — I took the train and arrived late.
  • Compramos los boletos y entramos al museo. — We bought the tickets and entered the museum.

Reflexive verbs keep their pronoun in the preterite: me levanté, te acostaste, se durmió.

Common Sentence Patterns With Pronouns

Pronouns can feel messy at first, yet they follow steady rules. Once you know where they go, your sentences sound smoother.

Direct And Indirect Object Pronouns

Put me, te, lo, la, le, nos, los, las, les right before the conjugated verb.

  • La vi en el parque. — I saw her in the park.
  • Les di las gracias. — I thanked them.
  • Nos explicó la tarea. — He explained the assignment to us.

Two Pronouns In One Sentence

When a verb has both an indirect and a direct object, Spanish can place two short pronouns before the verb. The order is indirect first, then direct: me lo, te la, nos los.

If you need le or les next to lo, la, los, or las, they change to se to keep the sound clean.

  • Se lo di. — I gave it to him.
  • Se las mandé. — I sent them to her.
  • ¿Se lo contaste? — Did you tell it to them?

Negative Preterite Sentences

Negation is simple: place no right before the verb (and before any pronouns).

  • No lo encontré. — I didn’t find it.
  • No me llamaron. — They didn’t call me.
  • No quisimos salir. — We didn’t want to go out.

Questions In The Preterite

Spanish questions often keep the same word order as statements. The voice and the question marks do the heavy lifting.

  • ¿Llegaste temprano? — Did you arrive early?
  • ¿Qué compraron? — What did they buy?
  • ¿Cuándo empezó la clase? — When did class start?

Table Of Preterite Use Cases And Ready-Made Lines

Use this table as a chooser: pick the situation, then borrow the matching sentence shape.

When To Use It Spanish Sentence English Meaning
Finished task Terminé el proyecto hoy. I finished the project today.
One-time event Recibí una llamada. I received a call.
Start or end La película empezó a las nueve. The movie started at nine.
Series of actions Entré, saludé y me senté. I walked in, said hi, and sat down.
Change of state Me cansé y me dormí. I got tired and fell asleep.
Specific time marker Salimos ayer por la tarde. We went out yesterday afternoon.
Completed duration Estudié dos horas. I studied for two hours.

Irregular Preterite Forms You’ll See A Lot

Some verbs refuse the regular endings. Learn the ones you meet most and you’ll understand real Spanish sooner.

Ser And Ir Share One Form Set

fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fueron can mean “I went” or “I was.” The surrounding words tell you which one.

  • Fui al banco. — I went to the bank.
  • Fue una buena idea. — It was a good idea.

Common Irregular Stems

These stems take a shared set of endings: -e, -iste, -o, -imos, -ieron. You’ll notice there are no accent marks here.

  • tenertuve
  • estarestuve
  • hacerhice (and hizo for él/ella/usted)
  • poderpude
  • ponerpuse
  • venirvine
  • decirdije

Irregular Verbs In Full Sentences

  • No pude entrar. — I couldn’t go in.
  • Ella dijo la verdad. — She told the truth.
  • Hice la compra y volví. — I did the shopping and came back.

Stem Changes In The Preterite

Stem changes in the preterite show up in a smaller set than in the present tense. Many -ir verbs change only in the third person forms (él/ella/usted and ellos/ellas/ustedes).

-Ir Verbs With E To I

  • pedirpidió, pidieron
  • servirsirvió, sirvieron

-Ir Verbs With O To U

  • dormirdurmió, durmieron
  • morirmurió, murieron

Use these in short lines and they stick: Pidieron la cuenta (They asked for the bill). Se durmió temprano (He fell asleep early).

Table Of High-Frequency Irregular Verbs

Memorize these forms first and you’ll spot them across movies, chats, and homework.

Infinitive Yo Form Él/Ella/Usted Form
ser/ir fui fue
tener tuve tuvo
estar estuve estuvo
hacer hice hizo
poder pude pudo
poner puse puso
venir vine vino
decir dije dijo
querer quise quiso
saber supe supo

Preterite Vs. Imperfect Without The Headache

Both tenses talk about the past, but they do different jobs. Preterite reports the completed event. Imperfect gives background, habits, or what was going on when something hit.

Two Lines, Two Meanings

  • Conocí a Ana. — I met Ana.
  • Conocía a Ana. — I knew Ana.
  • Ayer llovió. — It rained yesterday.
  • Llovía cuando salí. — It was raining when I left.

If your sentence answers “What happened?” pick preterite. If it answers “What was it like?” or “What used to happen?” pick imperfect.

Practice: Build Your Own Sentences

Practice works best when you tie it to your life. Start with verbs you already know, then swap in one new irregular each day. Keep the sentences short so you can say them out loud without tripping.

Fill-In Patterns

  • Ayer ____ (yo) ____. — Yesterday I ____.
  • El fin de semana pasado ____ (nosotros) ____ y después ____. — Last weekend we ____ and then ____.

Twelve Preterite Sentences To Copy

  1. Me desperté temprano y abrí la ventana. — I woke up early and opened the window.
  2. Compré pan y preparé café. — I bought bread and made coffee.
  3. Escribí un mensaje y lo envié. — I wrote a message and sent it.
  4. Mi amigo vino a mi casa y cenamos juntos. — My friend came to my house and we ate dinner together.
  5. Perdimos el autobús, pero tomamos un taxi. — We missed the bus, but we took a taxi.
  6. Ella pidió una pizza y pagó con tarjeta. — She ordered a pizza and paid by card.
  7. Mis padres llamaron y contesté de inmediato. — My parents called and I answered right away.
  8. El profesor hizo una pregunta y respondimos. — The teacher asked a question and we answered.
  9. No supe la respuesta, así que estudié más. — I didn’t know the answer, so I studied more.
  10. Se me cayó el teléfono y se rompió la pantalla. — My phone fell and the screen broke.
  11. Yo quise ayudar, pero no pude. — I wanted to help, but I couldn’t.
  12. Terminamos el juego y celebramos. — We finished the game and we celebrated.

When you write your own set, keep a simple rule: one sentence, one finished action. Then stack them to tell a longer story.