Simple Past: sein, haben
Präteritum: sein, haben
Simple Past: sein, haben in German
Overview
While spoken German generally prefers the Perfekt for past events, the simple past (Präteritum) of sein and haben is a major exception. Germans say "Ich war gestern krank" (I was sick yesterday) and "Er hatte keine Zeit" (He had no time) far more naturally than "Ich bin gestern krank gewesen" or "Er hat keine Zeit gehabt." These two verbs are used in their Präteritum forms so frequently that they are effectively the standard way to express "was" and "had" in both spoken and written German.
At the B1 level, mastering the Präteritum of sein and haben is essential. You already know how to conjugate these verbs in the present tense; now you need to internalize their past forms. The good news is that both conjugation sets are short and follow clear patterns.
These forms also serve as the foundation for the past perfect tense (Plusquamperfekt) and the subjunctive II (Konjunktiv II), which you will encounter soon. Learning them well now pays dividends later.
How It Works
Conjugation of sein (was/were)
| Person | Präteritum |
|---|---|
| ich | war |
| du | warst |
| er / sie / es | war |
| wir | waren |
| ihr | wart |
| sie / Sie | waren |
Conjugation of haben (had)
| Person | Präteritum |
|---|---|
| ich | hatte |
| du | hattest |
| er / sie / es | hatte |
| wir | hatten |
| ihr | hattet |
| sie / Sie | hatten |
Pattern notes:
- Sein is completely irregular — the forms must simply be memorized.
- Haben follows a recognizable pattern: hatte + personal endings (-st, -n, -t, -n). The 1st and 3rd person singular are identical (hatte), just like war for sein.
When to use Präteritum vs. Perfekt for sein/haben
| Situation | Preferred Form | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Spoken German | Präteritum | Ich war müde. |
| Written German | Präteritum | Es war ein schöner Tag. |
| Formal speech | Präteritum | Wir hatten keine Wahl. |
For sein and haben, the Präteritum is preferred in all contexts. The Perfekt forms (bin gewesen, habe gehabt) exist but sound stilted in most situations.
Examples in Context
| German | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Ich war gestern krank. | I was sick yesterday. | Most natural way to say this |
| Er hatte keine Zeit. | He had no time. | Standard usage of hatte |
| Wir waren im Urlaub. | We were on vacation. | Travel narrative |
| Hattest du Spaß? | Did you have fun? | Question form |
| Es war sehr kalt. | It was very cold. | Weather description |
| Sie hatten ein großes Haus. | They had a big house. | Description of past possession |
| Wart ihr schon dort? | Were you already there? | Informal plural question |
| Ich hatte Hunger. | I was hungry. | Literally: I had hunger |
| Das war eine gute Idee. | That was a good idea. | Evaluation of past event |
| Wir hatten viel zu tun. | We had a lot to do. | Describing past workload |
| Es war einmal ein König. | Once upon a time there was a king. | Classic storytelling formula |
Common Mistakes
Using Perfekt when Präteritum sounds more natural
- Awkward: Ich bin gestern müde gewesen.
- Natural: Ich war gestern müde.
- Why: For sein and haben, the Präteritum is always the more natural choice in both speech and writing.
Confusing war and waren
- Wrong: Wir war im Kino.
- Right: Wir waren im Kino.
- Why: "War" is for ich and er/sie/es (singular). "Waren" is for wir, sie (they), and Sie (formal).
Mixing up hatte and hätte
- Wrong: Ich hätte gestern keine Zeit. (stating a fact)
- Right: Ich hatte gestern keine Zeit.
- Why: "Hätte" is the subjunctive II form (would have). "Hatte" is the simple past (had). They look similar but have very different meanings.
Usage Notes
The Präteritum of sein and haben is one of the first forms German children learn, and it is deeply embedded in everyday language. Phrases like "Es war einmal..." (Once upon a time...), "Das war's" (That's it), and "Ich hatte recht" (I was right) are idioms that always use the Präteritum.
In narrative writing — stories, novels, news articles — the Präteritum of sein and haben blends seamlessly with the Präteritum of other verbs. In spoken German, however, they often appear mixed with Perfekt: "Ich war im Kino und habe einen guten Film gesehen" (I was at the cinema and saw a good film). This mixing is perfectly natural.
Regional variation exists: in southern Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, speakers sometimes use the Perfekt even for sein and haben in casual speech, though the Präteritum remains dominant everywhere.
Practice Tips
- Replace every "bin/ist/sind ... gewesen" in your German with "war/warst/waren" for a week. Do the same with "habe/hat/haben ... gehabt" → "hatte/hattest/hatten." This forces the Präteritum into your active vocabulary.
- Tell a short story about your last vacation using only war/hatte forms: "Ich war in Spanien. Das Wetter war schön. Wir hatten ein gutes Hotel. Das Essen war fantastisch."
- Practice the full conjugation tables out loud until you can produce any form without hesitation. These are high-frequency words that need to be automatic.
Related Concepts
- Perfect Tense with haben — the broader Perfekt system that sein/haben Präteritum complements
- Simple Past: Modal Verbs — the next group of verbs commonly used in the Präteritum
- Simple Past: Regular Verbs — extending the Präteritum to regular verbs
Prerequisite
Perfect Tense with habenA2Concepts that build on this
More B1 concepts
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