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  1. Learn how to form and use the past perfect tense in Spanish, also known as the pluperfect, to talk about past actions that happened before another past action. See examples, explanations, drills and links to other past tenses.

    • Auxiliary Verb

      When stating the existence of a noun in the past tense, we...

    • Pluperfect

      Spanish nouns have a gender, which is either feminine (like...

    • Conjugation Drill

      The world's most popular Spanish translation website. Over 1...

    • Past Perfect

      Translate Past perfect. See 3 authoritative translations of...

    • SpanishDictionary

      The world's most popular Spanish translation website. Over 1...

  2. 3 maj 2023 · Learn how to form and use the past perfect tense in Spanish with haber and past participles. See the difference between past perfect and present perfect, preterite, and other tenses.

  3. Learn how to use the past perfect in Spanish, also known as "pretérito pluscuamperfecto", to talk about actions that happened before another past action. See examples, explanations and exercises to master this tense.

  4. The past perfect tense, sometimes called pluperfect, is used to describe actions that happened before another action in the past or had been true at a certain point. Habíamos vivido en España antes. (We had lived in Spain before.) Ella había decidido decírselo.

  5. Conjugation Chart for Past Perfect – Pluscuamperfecto (de indicativo). Used to express an action which happened in the past before another past action.

  6. The Spanish past perfect tense is “the past of the past”. It expresses an action that took place before another point or action in the past. Examples: Aquel día, Carlos estaba radiante de felicidad. Había preparado la tarta de fresas más deliciosa de su vida. That day, Carlos was radiant with happiness.

  7. The formula to form the Past Perfect consists of 2 words: First, the verb haber conjugated in Imperfect Tense: había, habías, había, habíamos, habíais, habían. Second, the Past Participle of the verb expressing the action. The Past Participle is the same for all persons.

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