- How Aspect Affects Verb Conjugation
- Habitual Aspect in Spanish
- Imperfective Aspect in Spanish
- Perfective Aspect in Spanish
- Progressive Aspect in Spanish
- Practise Spanish Verb Aspect
- Time to Practicar!
Can you remember the first verb you learned in Spanish? No doubt, you know the past, present, and future versions of that verb.
But once you reach a more advanced level, you need to learn more nuances. These allow you to express not just when a verb happens, but when it happens relative to other events, or whether the action is in progress at the time of speaking, for example. This nuance is called: verb aspect.
In this article, we’ll cover four Spanish verb aspects:
- Habitual
- Imperfective
- Perfective
- Progressive
Read on to learn what they mean, how they work, and how to use them.
How Aspect Affects Verb Conjugation
Verb aspect in Spanish expresses not just when something happens, but whether the action was, is, or will be:
- Regularly occurring
- Incomplete
- Complete
- Ongoing
Each different aspect is shown by using different verb conjugations; see for example all the different progressive tenses conjugations used to convey the ongoing aspect.
Indicative:
Kwiziq Spanish tense name | English name | Alternative name used in Europe | Example |
El Presente Progresivo | Present Progressive / Continuous | Presente Continuo |
Yo estoy jugando Tú estás comiendo Ella está trabajando |
El Pretérito Perfecto Progresivo | Present Perfect Progressive / Continuous | Perfecto Continuo / Pretérito Perfecto Compuesto Continuo |
Yo he estado jugando Tú has estado comiendo Ella ha estado trabajando |
El Imperfecto progresivo | Imperfect/ Past Progressive / Continuous | Imperfecto Continuo |
Yo estaba jugando Tú estabas comiendo Ella estaba trabajando |
El Indefinido Progresivo | Preterite / Past Progressive / Continuous | Indefinido Continuo / Pretérito Perfecto Simple Continuo |
Yo estuve jugando Tú estuviste comiendo Ella estuvo trabajando |
El Pluscuamperfecto Progresivo | Pluperfect / Past Perfect Progressive / Continuous | Pluscuamperfecto Continuo |
Yo había estado jugando Tú habías estado comiendo Ella había estado trabajando |
El Futuro Progresivo | Future Progressive / Continuous | Futuro Continuo |
Yo estaré jugando Tú estarás comiendo Ella estará trabajando |
El Futuro Perfecto Progresivo | Future Perfect Progressive /Continuous | Futuro Perfecto Continuo |
Yo habré estado jugando Tú habrás estado comiendo Ella habrá estado trabajando |
El Condicional Simple Progresivo | Conditional Progressive / Continuous | Condicional Continuo |
Yo estaría jugando Tú estarías comiendo Ella estaría trabajando |
El Condicional Perfecto Progresivo |
Conditional Perfect Progressive / Continuous |
Condicional Perfecto Continuo |
Yo habría estado jugando Tú habrías estado comiendo Ella habría estado trabajando |
Subjunctive:
Kwiziq Spanish tense name | English name | Alternative name used in Europe | Example |
El Presente Progresivo de Subjuntivo |
Present Progressive / Continuous subjunctive |
Presente Continuo de subjuntivo |
Yo esté jugando Tú estés comiendo Ella esté trabajando |
El Perfecto Progresivo de subjuntivo |
Present Perfect Progressive / Continuous subjunctive |
Perfecto Continuo / Pretérito Perfecto Compuesto Continuo de subjuntivo |
Yo haya estado jugando Tú hayas estado comiendo Ella haya estado trabajando |
El Imperfecto progresivo de subjuntivo |
Imperfect/ Past Progressive / Continuous subjunctive |
Imperfecto Continuo de subjuntivo |
Yo estuviera jugando Tú estuvieras comiendo Ella estuviera trabajando |
El Pluscuamperfecto progresivo de subjuntivo |
Pluperfect / Past Perfect Progressive / Continuous subjunctive |
Pluscuamperfecto Continuo de subjuntivo |
Yo hubiera estado jugando Tú hubieras estado comiendo Ella hubiera estado trabajando
|
On the other hand, for a tense to indicate completion, we use the perfect tenses , i.e using “haber”.
Aspect, therefore, provides more information about how and when a verb’s action occurs. The following sections will explain the four verb aspects and how to use them.
Habitual Aspect in Spanish
The habitual aspect denotes whether something did happen, is happening, or will happen regularly:
Marta suele ir a la piscina los sábados.
Marta usually goes to the swimming pool on Saturdays.
Carlos solía ser muy estudioso. Ahora solo quiere salir a divertirse.
Carlos used to be very studious. Now he only wants to go out to have fun.
As these examples show, the use of Spanish verb “soler” creates this nuance of habituality, generally used in the present and imperfect tense. Check out these lessons below to learn how to use the verb "soler" to create the habitual aspect:
Imperfective Aspect in Spanish
The Imperfective aspect suggests that the action was, is, or will be incomplete:
En esa época Dani trabajaba en Barcelona.
Back then Dani worked / was working in Barcelona.
Mañana iremos a su casa.
We will go to their house tomorrow.
All Spanish simple tenses except for el Pretérito Indefinido have the imperfective aspect.
Perfective Aspect in Spanish
The Perfective aspect describes complete actions. The verbs were, are, or will be completed, or finished:
Yo he visitado Barcelona.
I have visited Barcelona.
Yo visité Barcelona.
I visited Barcelona.
All Spanish compound / perfect tenses, i.e using the auxiliary verb “haber”, and the simple tense Pretérito Indefinido have the perfective aspect.
Progressive Aspect in Spanish
The Progressive aspect expresses that a verb was, is, or will be ongoing, such as:
Cuando llegues, estaré trabajando.
When you arrive, I will be working.
Verb conjugation for the progressive aspect is very similar in Spanish and English.
In English, we use a form of the verb “to be,” and add -ing (the present participle). In Spanish, we do the same, using a form of the verb “estar” and adding the present participle -ando or -iendo (or an irregular present participle form in some cases).
Practise Spanish Verb Aspect
Before you dive into our exercises, here are some concise lessons by our expert teachers you might want to check out if you still have any doubt on the topic of Spanish verb aspect:
- The Spanish imperfect progressive vs the Spanish preterite progressive
- Using the perfect tense in Spanish (not the preterite) to talk about experiences
- Using the preterite tense in Spanish for completed actions in the past
- Using the pluperfect tense to indicate that a past action happens before another past action
- Using the imperfect tense in Spanish to express habits or repeated actions in the past
- Fill-in-the-gap exercises:
- Bilingual readers (texts in Spanish with audio and translation):
Time to Practicar!
Thankfully, the four aspects are just the same in Spanish as they are in English! So with a little bit of practice, you’ll definitely get these rules to stick.
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