Preterite of Stem Changing Verbs in Spanish | No More Errors

In the preterite, most stem-changers switch only in third person, using e→i or o→u (pidió, durmieron).

Stem-changing verbs feel friendly in the present tense, then they trip people up in the past. You learn pido and duermo, so your brain wants pedí to turn into piedí and dormí to turn into duermí. Spanish doesn’t play that way.

This article gives you a clean pattern, the small set of verbs that follow it, and a fast way to self-check your sentences. By the end, you’ll know when the stem change shows up, what it changes to, and where it never appears.

What Changes In The Preterite And Where It Shows Up

In the preterite, the usual “boot” stem change from the present tense mostly disappears. The change stays only in two spots: él/ella/usted and ellos/ellas/ustedes.

That’s it. Not yo. Not . Not nosotros. Not vosotros. If you can keep that map in your head, the rest gets much easier.

The Two Preterite Stem-Change Patterns That Matter

In the preterite, stem-changing verbs that keep a change usually follow one of these patterns:

  • e → i (pedir → pidió, pidieron; servir → sirvió, sirvieron)
  • o → u (dormir → durmió, durmieron; morir → murió, murieron)

Notice what’s missing: there is no e → ie and no o → ue in the preterite. Those are present-tense patterns. In the preterite’s third person, they “tighten” to i and u.

Why Spanish Keeps The Change In Third Person

This isn’t random. The third-person preterite endings for -ir verbs are -ió and -ieron. In those forms, the vowel in the stem is in the perfect spot to shift, and Spanish standard usage keeps that shift for a set of -ir verbs with vowel alternation. If you want the formal grammar framing, Real Academia Española’s notes on “Verbos con alternancia vocálica” outline how vowel alternation works across verb families and persons.

Preterite of Stem Changing Verbs in Spanish With Clear Patterns

Here’s the pattern you can trust: if the verb is -ir and it stem-changes in the present, check the third person in the preterite. Many of those verbs take e → i or o → u in él/ella/usted and ellos/ellas/ustedes.

Group 1: E→I Verbs You’ll Use All The Time

These are common in conversation, school Spanish, and most reading. Learn a few, then you’ll start spotting the family resemblance.

  • pedir: pidió, pidieron
  • servir: sirvió, sirvieron
  • repetir: repitió, repitieron
  • seguir: siguió, siguieron
  • sentir: sintió, sintieron
  • preferir: prefirió, prefirieron

Two quick notes. First, seguir keeps its u in siguió and siguieron because Spanish spelling needs that u to keep the hard g sound before i and e. Second, the accent marks in pidió and sintió still matter. They’re part of the standard written form.

Group 2: O→U Verbs That Sound Natural Once You Hear Them

This group is smaller, which is a nice break.

  • dormir: durmió, durmieron
  • morir: murió, murieron

If you already know the present forms duermo and muero, the preterite third person can feel odd for a day or two. Then your ear adjusts and durmieron starts to sound normal.

A Fast Self-Check That Catches Most Mistakes

When you write a preterite form, ask two questions:

  1. Is it an -ir verb that stem-changes in the present? If not, stop worrying about a preterite stem change.
  2. Is my subject él/ella/usted or ellos/ellas/ustedes? If yes, the stem may shift to i or u depending on the verb family.

If the answer to the second question is “no,” don’t force a change. That single habit fixes a big chunk of learner errors.

When The Stem Change Does Not Happen

Most forms in the preterite stay calm. Even with the verbs above, the change is limited to third person. That means these are correct:

  • yo pedí, tú pediste, nosotros pedimos, vosotros pedisteis
  • yo dormí, tú dormiste, nosotros dormimos, vosotros dormisteis

If you’ve seen charts that suggest a “boot” in the preterite, treat that as a red flag. The “boot” shape is a present-tense habit, not a preterite one.

-Ar And -Er Stem-Changers Do Not Stem-Change In The Preterite

Verbs like pensar (pienso) and volver (vuelvo) are stem-changers in the present, yet their preterite forms are regular for the stem vowel: pensé, pensaste, pensó; volví, volviste, volvió. If you’re matching patterns, the preterite stem-change rule you’re learning here is a mostly -ir story.

Don’t Confuse Stem Changes With Spelling Changes

Spanish has other preterite changes that can look like stem changes at first glance. They’re a different category.

  • -car/-gar/-zar verbs shift spelling in yo to keep sound: busqué, llegué, empecé.
  • -uir verbs often add y in third person: construyó, construyeron.
  • Some verbs have fully irregular preterite stems: tuve, hizo, fui.

These changes are real, they’re worth learning, and they don’t follow the e→i / o→u pattern described above.

Table Of Common Preterite Stem-Changers And Their Third-Person Forms

This table is meant to be your quick scan list. Use it when you’re writing a story or checking homework, not as something to memorize in one sitting.

Infinitive Change Pattern Él/Ella/Usted • Ellos/Ellas/Ustedes
pedir e→i pidió • pidieron
servir e→i sirvió • sirvieron
repetir e→i repitió • repitieron
seguir e→i (+gu) siguió • siguieron
sentir e→i sintió • sintieron
preferir e→i prefirió • prefirieron
vestirse e→i se vistió • se vistieron
divertirse e→i se divirtió • se divirtieron
dormir o→u durmió • durmieron
morirse o→u se murió • se murieron

How To Conjugate These Verbs Step By Step

Charts help, yet real writing demands a process you can run in your head. Here’s a simple sequence that works even when you’re tired.

Step 1: Build The Regular Preterite Frame

Start with the regular -ir endings: -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, -ieron. If you can lay that frame down, you’ll feel where the odd parts belong.

Step 2: Only Touch The Stem In Two Spots

Now check whether you’re making él/ella/usted or ellos/ellas/ustedes. If not, you’re done. Write the regular stem and move on.

Step 3: Swap The Vowel With The Preterite Version

If you are in third person, swap the stem vowel:

  • present e→ie or e→i becomes e→i in third-person preterite
  • present o→ue becomes o→u in third-person preterite

That’s why preferir gives prefirió, not preferió, and why dormir gives durmió, not dormió.

Step 4: Keep The Accent Marks Where They Belong

The third-person singular ending -ió carries an accent, and the spelling in durmió or sintió keeps it. If you want a clean definition of the tense itself, RAE’s glossary entry on “pretérito perfecto simple” puts the usage in plain terms.

Usage Notes That Keep Your Writing Natural

Stem changes are one piece of writing well in the past tense. The other piece is choosing the right past tense for your meaning. In many varieties of Spanish, the preterite marks a completed action tied to a finished time frame, while the present perfect can link to a time period that still includes “now.” RAE outlines that contrast in “Los tiempos de indicativo (II)”.

In practical terms, if you’re telling what happened last night, last year, or on Monday, the preterite is often the tense you’ll reach for. That’s the setting where pidió and durmieron pop up.

Common Errors And A Quick Fix For Each One

These mistakes show up again and again because they feel logical to an English-speaking learner. The fixes are simple once you name the error.

Common Wrong Form Correct Form Quick Fix
piedió pidió In preterite third person, e→ie tightens to e→i.
duermieron durmieron In preterite third person, o→ue tightens to o→u.
nosotros sintimos → sintimos sentimos No stem change in nosotros/vosotros.
yo prefirió yo preferí Only third person takes the change.
ellos pedieron ellos pidieron Check the verb family before you write -ieron.
se morió se murió Morir follows o→u in third person.
se vestió → se vestió (written as se vestió but pronounced flat) se vistió Listen for the i sound; write it in the stem.

Practice That Builds Speed Without Guessing

You don’t need fifty worksheets. You need a small routine that forces the right choice under light pressure. Use the sets below, then write your own lines about real events. If you want extra practice that’s aligned with learner levels, the Instituto Cervantes activity “El pretérito indefinido” is a clean, classroom-style option.

Mini Drill 1: Pick The Right Third Person

  • Mi amiga (pedir) ayuda y yo la ayudé.
  • Ellos (dormir) ocho horas y se levantaron temprano.
  • El camarero (servir) la comida y todos comimos.

Write the verb, then underline the subject. If it’s third person plural or singular, check for e→i or o→u. If it’s not, stop and write the regular stem.

Mini Drill 2: Mix In Nosotros And Vosotros On Purpose

  • Nosotros (preferir) quedarnos en casa, pero ellos salieron.
  • Vosotros (sentir) frío, pero yo tenía calor.
  • Nosotros (dormir) poco, y tú dormiste mucho.

This set trains the “no change” reflex. When learners get these right, their writing starts to feel steady.

Mini Drill 3: Reflexive Versions

  • Ella (vestirse) rápido y salió.
  • Mis amigos (divertirse) mucho en la fiesta.
  • Mi tío (morirse) joven, y mi abuela lloró.

Reflexive verbs don’t change the preterite rule. The only extra step is placing se correctly and matching it to the subject.

A One-Page Checklist Before You Hit Publish Or Submit Homework

Run this list each time you use a stem-changing -ir verb in the preterite. After a week, you’ll stop needing it.

  • I identified the infinitive and confirmed it’s an -ir stem-changer in the present.
  • I checked the subject. Only third person gets the stem change in the preterite.
  • If it’s third person, I used e→i or o→u (not e→ie, not o→ue).
  • I kept the regular endings: -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, -ieron.
  • I kept accent marks in third-person singular (-ió).
  • I reread the sentence out loud. If it sounds off, I rechecked the verb family.

If you want one last mental anchor: preterite stem changes in this set are small and narrow. Two persons. Two vowel swaps. That’s the whole story.

References & Sources