30 The Perfect (Completed) Tenses with HABER Flashcards
Just by learning the conjugation of one verb, you can vastly increase the verb tenses and forms you have available in Spanish.
It may come as no surprise that the verb is haber, which is translated as the auxiliary verb “to have.” As an auxiliary verb, haber in Spanish and “to have” in English are used to form the perfect tenses.
No, they aren’t called the perfect tenses because they’re better than the others. But one meaning of “perfect,” one we don’t see very often today outside of literature, is “complete.” The perfect verb tenses, then, refer to completed actions (although they aren’t the only way of referring to completed actions).
Contrast two ways of referring to something that happened in the past: He salido (“I have left”) and estaba saliendo (“I was leaving”). In the first instance, it is clear that the act described by the verb is completed; it’s something that was over by a specific time. But in the second case, there is no indication when the departure was completed; in fact, the act of leaving still could be occurring.
In both English and Spanish, the perfect tenses are formed by using a form of the verb haber or “to have” followed by the past participle (el participio in Spanish). In English, the participle typically is formed by adding “-ed” to verbs; the Spanish participle, which has origins related to the English participle, typically is formed by using the ending of -ado for -ar verbs and -ido for -er and -ir verbs.
The tense of the resulting verb depends on which tense of haber is used. Use the present tense of haber to create the present perfect tense, the future tense to create the future perfect tense, and so on.
Examples of the various tenses using haber salido (“to have left”) in the first-person singular.
Present perfect indicative: He salido. I have left. Past perfect indicative (pluperfect):
Había salido. I had left.
Future perfect indicative:
Habré salido. I will have left.
Conditional perfect indicative : Habría salido. I would have left.
Note that the preterite perfect indicative tense (Hube salido. I had left.) isn’t used much in speech or modern writing. You’re most likely to find it in literature.
I have bought a new car but I can’t drive it.
He comprado un coche nuevo
pero no puedo manejarlo.
manejar= drive / handle
If I had made (SUBJ) that film, the critics would have eaten me alive!
Si yo hubiera hecho esa película ¡los críticos me habrían comido vivo!
I am here today, tomorrow I will have gone.
Hoy estoy aquí, mañana me habré ido.