IR Verbs In Spanish Conjugation In Past Tense | Past Forms

Spanish -ir verbs use -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, and -ieron in the preterite for completed past actions.

Spanish learners often meet past tense forms right after the present tense, and -ir verbs can feel like a lot at once. The good news: regular -ir verbs in the preterite follow one clean pattern. Once you can build viví, escribiste, and abrió, dozens of verbs start to behave.

This article keeps the job narrow: how -ir verbs work in Spanish past tense, when to choose the preterite, and where stem changes appear. You’ll get tables, plain sentences, and a short practice set you can copy into notes.

What Past Tense Means For -IR Verbs

Spanish has more than one past tense. The preterite names a completed action, often tied to a finished time: ayer, anoche, el lunes, la semana pasada. The imperfect describes habits, background, age, time, feelings, or actions that were ongoing.

For many lessons, “past tense” means the preterite first. That’s the form you need for lines like “I lived in Madrid,” “she opened the door,” or “they wrote a note.” With regular -ir verbs, you remove the -ir ending and attach the preterite ending to the stem.

  • vivir → viv- → viví, viviste, vivió
  • escribir → escrib- → escribí, escribiste, escribió
  • abrir → abr- → abrí, abriste, abrió

Spanish -IR Past Tense Conjugation Patterns For Clean Sentences

The RAE conjugation models list partir as the regular third-conjugation model, which makes it a handy reference for -ir endings. The RAE also explains that the pretérito perfecto simple places an action before the speaking moment, often as a finished event.

Build the form in three moves. Cut off -ir. Keep the stem. Add the ending that matches the subject. The endings are the same as regular -er verbs in the preterite, so aprender and vivir share this past-tense set.

Regular Preterite Endings

Here is the full regular pattern with vivir. Accent marks matter because they separate yo from other forms and mark the natural stress of the word.

  • yo viví — I lived
  • tú viviste — you lived
  • él, ella, usted vivió — he, she, you formal lived
  • nosotros vivimos — we lived
  • vosotros vivisteis — you all lived in Spain
  • ellos, ellas, ustedes vivieron — they, you all lived

Notice nosotros vivimos. It matches the present-tense form for vivir, so the time marker must do extra work: Hoy vivimos aquí means “we live here today,” while Ayer vivimos allí means “yesterday we lived there.”

Subject Clues That Keep The Pattern Neat

Spanish often drops the subject pronoun because the ending already points to the subject. Viví is normally enough for “I lived,” and vivieron points to “they” or “you all” in Latin America. Add the pronoun when the line could be unclear or when you want contrast.

Usted follows the same form as él and ella: usted vivió. Ustedes follows ellos and ellas: ustedes vivieron. Vosotros appears in Spain and takes -isteis. If your class uses Latin American Spanish, you may see ustedes in both formal and casual group speech.

For study, group the endings by sound. The singular forms are -í, -iste, -ió. The plural forms are -imos, -isteis, -ieron. That split makes dictation and sentence writing less messy.

Regular And Stem-Changing -IR Verb Past Forms

Not every -ir verb stays regular in the preterite. Many regular verbs behave neatly, but several common -ir verbs change inside the stem in third person only. Pedir becomes pidió and pidieron. Dormir becomes durmió and durmieron.

Verb Type Pattern Past-Tense Sentence
Regular: vivir viv- + endings Yo viví en Lima dos años.
Regular: escribir escrib- + endings Ella escribió tres cartas.
Regular: abrir abr- + endings Nosotros abrimos la tienda.
Regular: subir sub- + endings Tú subiste la maleta.
e → i: pedir pidió, pidieron Ellos pidieron agua.
e → i: servir sirvió, sirvieron El mesero sirvió café.
o → u: dormir durmió, durmieron El niño durmió tarde.
o → u: morir murió, murieron El pez murió ayer.

The table shows the main split: regular verbs change only at the ending; stem-changing verbs alter the stem only in él/ella/usted and ellos/ellas/ustedes. The yo, tú, nosotros, and vosotros forms keep the normal stem.

Accent Marks And Pronunciation

The yo ending -í and the third-person singular ending -ió always carry written accents in regular -ir preterite forms. This isn’t decoration. It tells the reader where the stress lands.

Compare escribo and escribió. The first is present tense: “I write.” The second is past tense: “he or she wrote.” One accent mark can change the subject and the time, so treat it as part of the spelling, not an optional mark.

Stem Changes In Third Person

Stem-changing -ir verbs in the preterite are easier when you fence off the two third-person boxes. Pedir changes to pidió and pidieron, but yo pedí and nosotros pedimos stay plain. Dormir changes to durmió and durmieron, but tú dormiste keeps the original o.

The pattern appears because -ir stem changes in the preterite are narrower than present-tense stem changes. In the present, pedir changes in more slots: pido, pides, pide, piden. In the preterite, the change shrinks to third person only.

When To Use Preterite Or Imperfect With -IR Verbs

The main choice is not only “past” versus “not past.” You choose between a finished event and a scene, habit, or ongoing state. The Instituto Cervantes lesson on pretérito perfecto vs. pretérito indefinido gives classroom work around this contrast, which is often where learners get stuck.

Use the preterite when the action has a clear edge. Use the imperfect when the action was repeated, unfinished, or part of the background. The English translation may not always make the split plain, so train yourself to read the whole sentence.

Meaning You Want Use Spanish Line
One finished act Preterite Escribí el informe anoche.
Repeated habit Imperfect Escribía cartas cada domingo.
Finished start or end Preterite La clase terminó a las ocho.
Background action Imperfect Vivíamos cerca del río.
Event inside a scene Preterite + imperfect Dormía cuando sonó el teléfono.

Common Traps With -IR Verbs

One trap is overusing the preterite because English often uses one past form. Spanish asks for more detail. “I wrote letters every week” is habit, so escribía often fits better than escribí.

A second trap is changing stems in every form. Pedir does not become pidí in standard preterite use. It is pedí, pediste, pidió, pedimos, pedisteis, pidieron. The shift appears only in the two third-person slots.

A third trap is mixing ir, the verb “to go,” with -ir verbs as a verb class. The verb ir is irregular: fui, fuiste, fue, fuimos, fuisteis, fueron. It does not follow vivir or partir.

Practice Set For Better Recall

Use these lines to test the pattern. Say the subject first, pick the stem, then attach the ending. Read each sentence aloud so the accent marks become part of the sound.

  1. Yo ______ (vivir) en Quito en 2020. Answer: viví.
  2. María ______ (abrir) la ventana. Answer: abrió.
  3. Nosotros ______ (escribir) el plan. Answer: escribimos.
  4. Ellos ______ (pedir) la cuenta. Answer: pidieron.
  5. Tú ______ (subir) al tren. Answer: subiste.
  6. El gato ______ (dormir) en el sofá. Answer: durmió.

For regular -ir verbs, the preterite pattern is small: stem plus -í, -iste, -ió, -imos, -isteis, -ieron. For stem-changing -ir verbs, watch the third-person forms. For ir itself, memorize fui through fueron as its own set. That mix will handle a large share of past-tense Spanish you’ll meet in reading, classwork, and daily speech.

References & Sources