Definition:
The Spanish preterite (pretérito indefinido/perfecto simple) and imperfect (pretérito imperfecto) are the two primary grammatical past tenses of Spanish, distinguished not by time reference but by grammatical aspect — the way the speaker conceptualizes the temporal contour of a past event or situation. The preterite presents a past event as complete and bounded — with a clear beginning, end, or both; the imperfect presents a past situation as ongoing, habitual, or background — without explicit boundaries. This aspectual contrast has no direct equivalent in the English past tense system (where simple past covers both), making preterite/imperfect selection one of the most persistently challenging features of Spanish grammar for English-speaking L2 learners.
Aspectual Contrast: Bounded vs. Unbounded
| Tense | Aspectual character | Conceptual perspective |
|---|---|---|
| Preterite | Perfective (bounded) | Views event as complete unit |
| Imperfect | Imperfective (unbounded) | Views situation as ongoing/habitual |
Core Uses
Preterite uses:
- Completed past event: Ayer comí pizza — I ate pizza yesterday (completed)
- Past event with specific duration: Vivió en Madrid cinco años — He lived in Madrid for five years (bounded period)
- Historical narrative events (foreground): Llegó, vio, venció — He arrived, saw, conquered
Imperfect uses:
- Ongoing or habitual past: Cuando era niño, comía pizza todos los viernes — When I was a child, I ate pizza every Friday (habitual)
- Background description: Era una tarde tranquila. El sol brillaba y los pájaros cantaban — Background description
- Interrupted ongoing action: Yo leía cuando llegó — I was reading when he arrived (ongoing background interrupted by preterite action)
The Foreground/Background Narrative Structure
In Spanish narrative, preterite and imperfect work together:
- Preterite: foreground events that advance the narrative
- Imperfect: background description and setting
Aquella noche hacía frío. Las calles estaban vacías. De repente, oyó un ruido —
That night it was cold (imperf. background). The streets were empty (imperf.). Suddenly, he heard a noise (pret. — event advancing the story).
History
The preterite/imperfect distinction reflects the Latin perfective/imperfective aspectual contrast (perfect vs. imperfect stems). Spanish grammaticalized this distinction more explicitly than some Romance peers. The Spanish preterite replaced the Latin pluperfect in function over time.
Common Misconceptions
- “Preterite = specific times; imperfect = vague times” — Aspectual choice, not temporal specificity, determines tense; imperfect actions can be in specific time frames
- “State verbs (saber, poder, querer) are always imperfect” — These verbs can appear in preterite with a change-of-state meaning: supo = found out (preterite, completed knowing-event) vs. sabía = knew (ongoing state)
Criticisms
- Fossilization of preterite-for-all-past is common among English-speaking learners and very resistant to correction
- The “foreground/background” frame requires narrative text exposure, which many classroom-based courses underuse
Social Media Sentiment
Preterite vs. imperfect is the second most discussed Spanish grammar challenge (after ser/estar) in online Spanish learning communities. “When to use each” questions flood every Spanish learning forum. Last updated: 2026-04
Practical Application
- Teach through narrative analysis: give learners story texts and ask them to identify foreground events (preterite) vs. background description (imperfect)
- Emphasize that aspectual choice carries real meaning differences — not just “style”
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Andersen, R. W. (1991). Developmental sequences: The emergence of aspect marking in second language acquisition. In T. Huebner & C. A. Ferguson (Eds.), Crosscurrents in Second Language Acquisition and Linguistic Theories (pp. 305–324). — Aspect Hypothesis applied to Spanish preterite/imperfect acquisition.
- Salaberry, M. R. (1999). The development of past tense verbal morphology in classroom L2 Spanish. Applied Linguistics, 20(2), 151–178. — L2 Spanish past tense development.
- Pountain, C. J. (2003). Exploring the Spanish Language. Oxford University Press. — Synchronic and diachronic coverage of Spanish past tense aspect.