9.4: Introduction to Siempre había un festejo
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This unit is devoted to the understanding of the preterit and imperfect in Spanish. Many people refer to these as the “two pasts” in Spanish, but that is essentially untrue! In language there are three markers of time (tense), i.e the present, past, and future. But to express how an action extends over time, there is a little thing called “aspect.” A verb tense can have either a perfect or progressive aspect. Think that the perfect tenses are so complete that they are perfect and that the progressive tenses are or were in progress and never completed. Let’s take a look at two examples of the preterit and the imperfect:
Both examples show the past tense but with different aspects: they have two different meanings. Which example shows a perfectly complete action in the past? Which one shows an action in progress that might have occurred various times? If you guessed that the preterit represents the perfect aspect and imperfect the progressive aspect then you are correct! #1 shows that she talked on the phone at either a specific time or it was a completed finished action. Whereas #2 shows a repeated or habitual action in the past that was never completed. So the next time you’re stuck on preterit versus imperfect, think about aspect and what meaning you are trying to convey.