A2

Irregular Preterites

Pretéritos Irregulares

Irregular Preterites in Spanish

Overview

If the regular preterite is the backbone of past-tense narration, the irregular preterites are where things get interesting -- and challenging. Many of the most frequently used Spanish verbs have irregular preterite forms: ser, ir, estar, tener, hacer, decir, poder, poner, saber, querer, venir, and traer, among others. Since these are everyday verbs, you will encounter them constantly.

At the CEFR A2 level, learning these irregular forms is essential because you simply cannot tell stories about the past without them. The silver lining is that many irregular preterites share common patterns: they use the same set of special endings and change their stems in predictable ways. Once you spot these patterns, memorizing the forms becomes much more manageable.

How It Works

Irregular preterite endings

Most irregular preterites share a special set of endings that differ from regular preterite endings. Notice there are no accent marks:

Subject Ending
yo -e
-iste
él/ella/usted -o
nosotros/as -imos
vosotros/as -isteis
ellos/ellas/ustedes -ieron / -eron

Common irregular stems

Infinitive Irregular stem Yo form Meaning
estar estuv- estuve was (location/state)
tener tuv- tuve had
poder pud- pude could
poner pus- puse put
saber sup- supe found out
hacer hic-/hiz- hice did/made
querer quis- quise wanted/tried to
venir vin- vine came
decir dij- dije said
traer traj- traje brought

Full conjugation examples

Subject estar (estuv-) hacer (hic-/hiz-) decir (dij-)
yo estuve hice dije
estuviste hiciste dijiste
él/ella/usted estuvo hizo dijo
nosotros/as estuvimos hicimos dijimos
vosotros/as estuvisteis hicisteis dijisteis
ellos/ellas/ustedes estuvieron hicieron dijeron

Note: hacer changes to hizo in the third person singular (c → z before o). Verbs with stems ending in -j (like decir, traer) use -eron instead of -ieron in the third person plural: dijeron, trajeron.

Ser and ir -- completely identical

Ser (to be) and ir (to go) have the same preterite forms. Context makes the meaning clear:

Subject Form As ser As ir
yo fui I was I went
fuiste you were you went
él/ella/usted fue he/she was he/she went
nosotros/as fuimos we were we went
vosotros/as fuisteis you were you went
ellos/ellas/ustedes fueron they were they went

Meaning changes in the preterite

Some verbs change their meaning subtly in the preterite:

Verb Present meaning Preterite meaning
saber to know found out, learned
conocer to know (a person) met (for the first time)
querer to want tried to
no querer to not want refused
poder to be able managed to, succeeded
no poder to not be able failed to

Examples in Context

Spanish English Note
Fui al cine. I went to the cinema. ir preterite
Hizo buen tiempo. The weather was good. hacer (hiz-)
No pude venir. I couldn't come. poder (pud-)
Me dijeron la verdad. They told me the truth. decir (dij-)
Estuve en casa todo el día. I was at home all day. estar (estuv-)
Tuve un problema. I had a problem. tener (tuv-)
Puso la mesa. He/She set the table. poner (pus-)
Supimos la noticia ayer. We found out the news yesterday. saber (sup-) = found out
Vinieron a las tres. They came at three. venir (vin-)
Traje los documentos. I brought the documents. traer (traj-)
Fue una fiesta increíble. It was an amazing party. ser preterite
Quiso ayudar. He/She tried to help. querer (quis-) = tried

Common Mistakes

Adding accent marks to irregular preterites

  • Wrong: Yo estuvé en casa.
  • Right: Yo estuve en casa.
  • Why: Unlike regular preterites (hablé, comí), irregular preterites do not carry accent marks on the yo or él/ella forms.

Using regular endings with irregular stems

  • Wrong: Yo hací los deberes.
  • Right: Yo hice los deberes.
  • Why: Irregular preterites use their own special endings (-e, -iste, -o, -imos, -isteis, -ieron). You cannot mix irregular stems with regular endings.

Confusing fue (ser) and fue (ir)

  • Note: Fue al cine (He went to the cinema) vs. Fue profesor (He was a teacher). Context is everything -- if there is a destination (a/al), it is ir; if there is a description, it is ser.

Forgetting the -eron ending for -j stems

  • Wrong: Dijieron la verdad.
  • Right: Dijeron la verdad.
  • Why: When the irregular stem ends in -j (dij-, traj-), the third person plural ending drops the i: -eron instead of -ieron.

Usage Notes

Irregular preterites are equally common across all Spanish-speaking regions. These forms are deeply ingrained in the language and do not vary between Spain and Latin America. The frequency of these verbs means you will hear and use them daily, so investing time in memorizing them pays off enormously.

Practice Tips

  • Group verbs by stem pattern. Learn estuv-, tuv-, pud-, pus-, sup- together since they share the same u-stem pattern. Then learn the i-stem group (hic-, quis-, vin-) and the j-stem group (dij-, traj-). Patterns are easier to remember than isolated forms.

  • Tell stories from your life. Narrate a memorable day or event using as many irregular preterites as possible: Fui al centro, hice las compras, puse todo en el coche, y vine a casa.

  • Focus on the most common five first. Start with fui, hice, tuve, estuve, dije -- these appear in almost every conversation about the past. Once they feel automatic, expand to the rest.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Preterite (Indefinido)A2

More A2 concepts

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