7.12 Repaso: Capítulo 7

Read the review summary below to assist you in completing your Intercultural Communication assignments and to prepare for demonstrating your mastery of the Can-Do Statements.

Artículos para las fiestas (Items for parties)

  • Los globos (balloons)
  • Los dulces (candies)
  • Las velas (candles)
  • El pastel (cake)
  • El champán (champagne)
  • Los bocadillos (appetizers/snacks; sandwiches in Spain)
  • Los regalos (presents, gifts)
  • La invitación (invitation)
  • Los invitados (guests)
  • El aniversario (anniversary)
  • El bautizo (baptism)
  • La boda (wedding)
  • El cumpleaños (birthday)
  • La graduación (graduation)
  • Los quince años (a girl’s 15th birthday celebration)
  • La quinceañera (the girl celebrating her 15th birthday)
  • El día de tu santo / Tu santo (your saint’s day)
  • El brindis (toast)
  • El festejo (party/celebration)
  • Los fuegos artificiales (fireworks)
  • Los novios (bride and groom)

Verbos

  • Besar (to kiss)
  • Brindar (to make a toast)
  • Casarse con (to marry, to get married to)
  • Cumplir años (to have a birthday)
  • Celebrar (to celebrate)
  • Decorar (to decorate)
  • Divertirse (to have fun)
  • Escoger (to choose)
  • Recoger (to pick up)
  • Romper (to break)
  • Terminar (to end)

Imperfect for description Preterite for narration
As you learned before, the imperfect is used to: 

  • express repeated, habitual, or usual actions in the past
  • describe actions that were ongoing in the past that would include the expression, “was-ing/were-ing” in English.
  • describe what things were like in the past with the expression “used to” in English. (I used to go to the park every Saturday when I was young.)

Along these same lines, the imperfect is used to describe conditions of time, people, and places in the past.

The imperfect gives all the background information for when you are explaining a story.

The order of events with the imperfect is often unimportant.

Ejemplos:

  • Cuando vivía en Barranquilla…
  • Había un festejo.
  • Él era guapo con pelo largo.
If the order of events is important to advance a past narration, use the preterite.

The preterite focuses on what actions happened first and last in a story.

Ejemplos:

  • Cuando llegué a la casa, inmediatamente me fijé en su amigo.
  • De repente, la música sonó y todos buscaron parejas para bailar.

When telling a story, the preterite is used to facilitate the events. This shows that one action was completed before the next one began.

You can use time expressions to indicate the order of events such as: primero (first), antes (before), después (after), luego (then), entonces (then).

Ejemplos:

  • Primero llegué a la casa.
  • Después conocí a Felipe.
  • Luego bailamos.

Pretérito e Imperfecto II

1.  A combination of imperfect with imperfect:
When you want to convey that two actions were ongoing at the same time in the past, you use the imperfect tense. You will often see the words “mientras” (while) and “y” to show that these actions were in progress simultaneously.

2.  A combination of preterite with preterite:
When you want to convey a series of completed actions in the past, you use the preterit tense for each action. It is very important to state the events in order of what happened first.

3.  A combination of imperfect with preterite:
When you want to show that an action was in progress when another action began, you use the imperfect for the continuous action and the preterite for the interrupting action.

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¡Todos unidos! Communication in Spanish I Copyright © 2024 by Amelia Moreno and Camille Qualtere is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.